TI TB ICWTEAN fDAILYV r ADDITIONS: 'anhellenic Amends Rules OPPENHEIM enic Association yester- d eight amendments to vs. ill now be one dollar for nber of the sorority for late sororities, just as for the active houses. t amendment, to Article I, deletes paragraph reads that annual dues ollars per year shall be on each associate mem- .nhel. ond amendment, Article n I, pertains to the du- e president and specifies shall be completely dis- from her sorority from f her initiation until the erm of office expires.' Aid Objectivity e 1 President Barbara g, '61, said this measure aote objectivity on the ie Panhel president, par- during rush. r change in the presi- bies would require her to. early budget with the 1 The reason for eliminating one vice-president is that until now the first vice-president's duties have been quite limited. Duties Defined Article IV, Section III, defines the duties of the chairman of public relations, saying that she shall: 1) Be responsible for all news coverage regarding Panhel; 2) Be responsible for all Panhel publications; 3) Serve as chair- man of the Public Relations Com- mittee; 4) Be chairman of elec- tions; 5) Be liaison between the University Panhel and other col- legiate Panhelleiics; 6) File a yearly budget with the treasurer. Article V, Section II, deletes the International Committee from Panhel structure. The duties of the chairman - of this committee will be assigned to the scholarship chairman who will work in co- operation with the Women's League International Committee. Delete Reference An amendment to Article XIII, Section I, deletes reference to Junior Panhellenic Association. Formerly the article had insured that there would be a Junior Pan- hel election each year, but recent revisions in the Junior Panhel constitution have made this pro- vision unnecessary. A further proposal, which pass- ed unanimously, changed the wording "Board of Delegates" to "President's Board" when refer- ring to Panhel. This is because of the recent constitutional amend- ment which makes a sorority's president its official delegate to Panhel. Committee, Board, Meet On Honesty By SANDRA JOHNSON The literary college steering committee met yesterday with the literary college administrative board to discuss cheating. "No student should cheat, and, there is no justification for cheat- ing," James Sevier, '61, literary college steering committee chair-. man, emphasized. "Anyone caught cheating should be disciplined--perhaps even more severely than they are at present." Seder pointed out that there are three conditions htat usually exist in a course where extensive cheat- ing occurs: there is comparatively little interest in the course; parts of the course are clearly of little value to the individual student; and cheating is thought by stu- dents to have gone on in the course in the past. Upon this basis the steering committee made three recom- mendations: 1) More attention should be given to impressing upon fresh- man, either during orientation week or in one of their introduc- tory courses, that cheating .s wrong ad does not comply with the high academic standards of the University., 2) The various colleges should make instructors aware of the problem and make it clear to them that if they do not act against cheating its existence will very likely grow. 3) The college administration should become somewhat sensitive to courses where extensive cheat- ing, is thought to exist, so that measures may be taken to combat it, because the cheating may be a symptom that the course is struc- tured poorly. St. Patrick Proves Success In Ridding Island of Snakes Welbourne Notes Wide Use Of Television in Education Tonight at 8:00 Newman Club By WILFRED ROY 'Televised education has prob- ably had a more phenomenal spread than any other education- al innovation," Lyndell Wel- bourne, co-ordinator of staff serv- ices for the Midwestern Program of Airborne Television, said re- cently. He cited taped television classes which, "if combined with the teachers' aid system, would pro- vide a stop-gap to financial and manpower shortages in education- al fields today." The television faculty has an entire staff of technical and edu- cational advisers "to ensure as far as possible that the classes will ap- peal to all students." The courses are difficult enough to stimulate the advanced stu- dent, while aimed at the general wider level of comprehension and still able to pick up those who are having trouble," Welbourne add- ed. Teacher Aids Teachers' aids, non-profession- als who do all secretarial and other work outside of actual teaching (finding lost overcoats, correcting objective tests and tak- ing roll) to enable the faculty to devote full time to teaching, are r a p i d ly becoming adopted throughout the nation. Their sal- aries are usually less than half that of a teacher, he said. Television classes can be made larger than at present, Welbourne asserted, by perhaps combining three classes into two, releasing the third teacher to fields where he is needed. The greater burden im- posed on the teachers of the en- larged classes would be alleviated by hiring two aides. This would cut salary costs slightly for the same number of I t B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION TONIGHT at 7:15 Sabbath Service Dr. Monheim S. Shapiro, speaker (American Jewish'Committee) "Trends and Tendencies Among Jews and Jewish Groups" Zwerdling-Cohn Chapel 1429 Hill St. niendment to Article III, II, deletes the office of sident and Article III, III, lists the duties of the e-president. SToGie decal Satire )ut Polities ers of the cast have been or "Tcartsba," an original' satire about politics in le, whioh will be presented ear's Junior Girls' Play. n of the junior class, write, direct and present the JGP. Carol Con. is the of this year's play. Louise s its director. cast includes: Elizabeth as Mundenga; Alice Er- durtsbo; Erwna Weiner, udy Miller, Sarab; Mar- dd Ailuba; and Sue Guf- rator. lot revolves around a radio y natives in the .jungle. nding the radio and lis- o the presidential elections, ives decide to hold their mocratic elections. The t process becomes slight- acted in the jungle. mances of "Tcartsba" will i March 23 to 25. Tickets sale Monday through y from 10 a.m. to 5 pm iday and Saturday from to 8:30 p.m. Inthe Wo- ,eague box office. ,Tickets be available on the Diag to 1 p.m. Monday through By MICHAEL HARRAH Today is St. Patrick's Day. It was many, many years ago' that #n energetic young Christian missionary drove the snakes once and for all from the Emerald Isle -or so the legend runs. History does not confirm it, but it, is still possible. At any rate, the missionary Patrick was born the son of a landed deacon, a Roman citizen, somewhere on the isle of Britain, possibly near present-day Pembroke, in 385 A.D. At the age of 16, he was cap- tured by invading Irish marauders and enslaved as a herdsman on the slopes of Slemish and Croungh- patrick in Ireland for some six years. Escapes Divinely He managed to escape with di- vine guidance, and he fled to Gaul (France) where he entered the monastary at Lerins to receive the tonsure: In 413, he returned to Britain to live with relatives. During this time he had a divine revelation which instructed him to return to Ireland and make it Christian. So hie spent the next 12 years in study at Auxerre (in Gaul), and in '431 when St. Palladius, the first Irish bishop, died, Pope Ger- manus I named Patrick to replace him. Zealous Campaign The zealous missionary embarked on an aggressive campaign. Land- ing in the winter at Saul, he travelled to Tara in the spring Hatcher's :Sister Dies in Kentucky Funeral services will be held this morning in Lexington, Ky., for Mrs. George Anderson, sister of University President Harlan Hatcher. Mrs. Anderson died Wed- nesday afternoon. and, in defiance of the pagan priests, kindled the Easter fire on Slane, a near-by hill., This action commanded respect, for the priests did not molest him, and soon he was travelling about Ireland with a small band of fol- lowers converting the various tribes to Christianity. In 441 he travelled to Rome and received the pallium and other treasures . from Pope St. Leo I. Four years later he returned to Ireland, enshrining there the treasures of the pope. Successful Mission All through his life, Patrick was the most successful in his mis- sions. General Meeting: to revise the Constitution. All members should attend. Followed by St. Patrick's Day Party LYNDELL WELBOURNE ... TV's phenomenal spread students and only take two-thirds of the room previously required. The school-room classes would become 'follow ups' to the lecture with the individual teachers clar- ifying and adding to the TV tape material, similar to the present lecture-recitation method. The major,.drawback has been in scheduling, Welbourne said. Grade school teachers can shift their routine to accommodate the broadcast times, but in high schools, with the students each on a different schedule moving from one room to another, and the schools themselves haying differ- ent class times and lengths, it "is giving many people ulcers." A; $7,000,000 project Is being completed in Indiana at this time which will serve six states, in- cluding Michigan, and approxi- mately 5,000,000 students later this year. Thirty-seven states will then be using some form of tele- vision education, Welbourne not- ed. The Central Michigan Educa- tional Council will sponsor a work- shop for suggestions on its tele- vision program on this campus Aug. 7'to Aug. 18. 'I A DU LTS WEEKDAY MAT INE ES . . . .. .............;.9 CH ILDREN UNDER 12 YEARS .. .. ..,. ... . .. ... . .. . ..50c 2-6264 Now - y Illl "AT BOTH STORES' AXIOMATIC THEORY: Linguists Use Math Concept' ALL ANGEL STEREO & HI FL By BEATRICE TEODORO v Grammatical structure can be explicitly described using mathe- matical concepts, Robert Lee of the International Business Ma- chine Company said yesterday. Nineteenth century methods of deriving theorems from a finite set of symbols and axioms are applicable in analyzing the "set of utterances" which make up lan- guage. For example, the. infinite set of integers can be "generated" by a set of finite symbols and cer- tain operations or "rules" con- cerning the symbols. In the same way, characterizing a set of sentences in a language under particular rules can yield all the utterances in the language, plus the correct structural descrip- tion of the utterances. One of the evident requirements Dial NO 8-6416 NOMINATED FOR 5 ACADEMY AWARDS ' * The ribald. t impudent. but always moving account of the encounter between } a girl-of-the- streets in a Grecian seaport town. . and the American who wants to rescue her from, her desperate (or is it?), situation v* 1 - --a 49LINAMERcOURI r t... ....s pr COMING TO OUR STAGE JO3,E RECO and his Company of SPANISH DANCERS In Person! Singers and Musiciansn of an utterance in the English language is that is be pronounce- able by English speaking peoples, Lee explained. Additional restrictions are that combinations of the utterances and the sequences of these com- binations are also pronounceable. Furthermore, the sequences of words must be understood. However, the sentence "Can computer think?" is a reasonable sequence of words although it is still not correct. Another rule must be added to control "agree- ment," and to yield "Can com- puters think?" Additional Axioms Sentences such as "They were stripping wires" and "They were humming wires" will necessitate additional axioms concerned with "grouping" the parts of the sen- tence. There would have to be some differentiation between "verb plus gerund" and "verb" combinations. Such a rule would: be more complicated by ambigu- ous sentences such as "Theyr were burning wires." A rule of grammatical descrip- tion must account for the differ- ences in the sentences "I shot a man in the street-I shot a man in the arm-I shot a man in the air," Lee said. There are certain restrictions on the type of rules, Lee said. Any rule which generates a "non-ut- terance" would be invalid, as would any operation which yield- GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY THE TOLL GATE (William S. Hart, U.S.A., 1920) and HIS BITTER PILL (Prod. by Mack Sennett, U.S.A., 1916) Rockham Amphitheatre, Monday, March 20, 8 p.m. Admission is solely by subscription. A subscrip- tion to the four remaining pro- grams of the series costs $2.00'. For further information, call NO- 2-6685 or NO 2-9359. ed incorrect grammatical struc- ture. Such an analysis of language by modern descriptive linguists is SGC Appoints,' New Alternates To. Conference Student Government Council announced appointments to the Conference on Youth Service Abroad and voted to' send three more alternate delegates to the National Student Association Re- gional Conference at Wednesday night's meeting. Appointments to the conference are Daily Editor Thomas Hayden, '61, and Philip Power, spec., dele- gates, and David Giltrow, '61, al- ternate. Alan Guskin, Grad, Frank Starkweather, '61, and Patricia Golden, '63, are the NSA alter- nates. Perry Morten, '61, past Michi- gan Union president, introduced his successor, Paul Carder, '62, to the Council. In his closing remarks he stressed that there are many campus areas with which the Council should be primarily cOn- cerned. The Council also voted to con- tribute $100 to the World Univer- sity Service Drive. Woithuis Seeks LSA Position The petition of Roger Wolthuis, '62, was accepted for literary, col- lege senior class secretary by the Senior Board Wednesday night. Wolthuis' petition received de- layed approval because it had been, turned in after the 5 p.m. Wednes- day deadline. Hed will oppose Franny Sue. Nash, '62, for secretary. price," . when you buy a second Ang. LP at the same list price. Includes complete catalogue. DISC SHOP TvFECENTER 1210 S. University 304 S. Thayer NO 3-6922 NO 5-4855 I' ROBERT LEE . . Infinite sets MICHIGAN THEATRE ORCH. $3.00 - 2.50 MON., MAR. 27t BAC $3.00 - 2.0, at 8:30 P.M. BAL. $3.00 - 2.00 with FLAMENCO GUITARISTS and SINGERS I I. Experience is Essential for Union Board of Directors an attempt "to say in a more ex- plicit way what a student has to learn to know a language," he said. one traditional method for studying languages, especially in- flected classical languages like Latin and Greek, has been the formulation of rules needed to make up other words. This method is characterized by systems of af- fixes that are attached to roots. A more important method of teaching has been "example and analogy" in which sample sen- tences are used as examples, and "the imagination of the mature reader" is utilized to create new examples. In such a method, "the contribution of the reader far outweighs the description of the example itself." Lubavitych Hasidim Music-Movies-Lecture at Hillel- Sun., March 19 Conducted by Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity Alpha Gamma Chapter 3 P.M. -Admission Free AT BOTH STORES" ALL fhi f i &stereo when you buy another RCA LP, at the same list price. Includes complete catalogue & Soria Series. DISC SHOP HERCENTER-1 1210 S. Univ. 304 S. Thayer NO 3-6922 NO 5-4855 I Writt~mn ad Ornc.eI bjjULCS DASIN ELECT. Robert Rosman Neil Cohen Ian Hunter David Baron DIAL NO 5-6290 zying Through Saturday iMMIE RODGERS as the TUCKY MOUNTAIN KID!1 Iormer Union Executive Council Members NEVER BEFORE SUCH FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS ON ALL CAPITOL ALBUMS! STEREO and HI F... /2 P when you buy a second Capitol LP at the same list price. Includes complete catalogue. #'t#'r #>1R### 7 #i ####e>inm m mm m mi##.# # Mr #.#w #Min M :M #7 #MMmm mi . I, mmmj Ia I I S.G.C. C/ft etn quil TONIGHT at 7 and 9 SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 7 and 9 DICKENS' THE NEW CHINA THE PICKWICK PAPERS Frank Sinatra Nat Cole - Kingston Trio - Peggy Lee Tennessee Ernie Ford - Kay Starr o Jackie Gleason PLUS...Original ,Cast Broadway Show Albums... EVERY Capitol Popular and Classical Album! HURRY! THIS SPECIAL OFFER IS LIMITED!r 1 1 i / I II