PAGE T 'V13''. THE 3YIICNrrA1w nArr.v PAGE TO T av M1C111Amr iH1LZ . FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1962 2 May Reduce English Offerings ADMINISTRATIVE POLICIES: SGC To Start Salaries For Executive Officers Moses Coit Tyler By JEAN TENANDER Elective technical writing and advanced speech courses in the. engineering college may be reduc-j ed as a result of the implementa- tion of changes brought about in engineering literature requirements, last spring. Prof. George McEwen of the en- gineering English department said Wednesday that although there are no statistics available as yet, there are indications of a trend in this direction. Classes in public speaking, scientific and technical writing, and argumentation and debate have all decreased in en- rollment by half from their com- parable size a year ago at this time. Williams To Talk About World Unity Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs G. Mennen Wil- liams, former Michigan governor, will speak on "The Morals and Spiritual Factors in the Struggle for World Community" at 7 p.m. today in the Michigan Union Ball- room. Williams' appearance is part of International Week and is be- ing sponsored by the Union Inter- national Affairs Committee and the Ecumenical Center. Some of those taking the courses now are students who have been allowed to continue with the pro- gram they were working in before the new ruling. Thus, there may be even fewer students taking the courses once all those unaffected by the change have graduated, Prof. McEwen said. New Requirements The new requirements which are effective for the first time this semester call for the student in engineering to take four credit hours in a literature course in addition to the six credit hours he must take in English as a fresh- man. The previous requirement had been that the student was merely required to take his additional credit hours in any ofhthe elec- tive. subjects offered to him at his level. The difficulty with this was that many students never took any lit- erature courses at all. They con- centrated solely on the technical skills of speech and composition and did no reading. In order to prevent this and to insure that every student will have at least one course in literature as an undergraduate, the new re- quirements have been created. No Predictions Prof. McEwen said he could not make any long range predictions of the ultimate effect this altera- tion in policy would have on the other English courses. "It will in- sure that those students who do take speech or technical writing will honestly want to do so," he said. This will serve to make these courses more meaningful and of a greater value to the student. They will no longer be the means to "escape" from a reading course, he said. Aside from this reason, another primary objective in changing the policy is to satisfy various asses- sors who have claimed in the past that engineering students really have no measurable basis for an understanding of the humanities. By EDWARD HERSTEIN Student Government Council will begin paying its officers as of Nov. 14. The president will re- ceive $25 a month, while the oth- er executive officers will earn $15 a month. The officers, however, will no longer be reimbursed for dining expenses at their regularly scheduled executive committee meetings, thus minimizing the in- crease in budget expenditures. SGC approved procedures for the Credentials and Rules Com- mittee. The committee, which en- Verdi Comes to Ann Arbor r .5 ENDING TONIGHT c DIAL 5-6290 rwalt Disey p. ~ ATDISNEY'S S appp s motion pide 'RtCG ?c' OOIOR' ?syf. n neml Jfi Y 'X Y4.,' c, t or STARTS SATURDAY_ SIDNEY POITIER-BOBBY DARIN-"PRESSURE POINT" ... 1. NOW I11 DIAL 8-6416 GRAND OPERA-Francesca Roberto will star as Violetta in a performance of Verdi's "La Traviata" at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Aud. Based on Alexandre Dumas' drama, "The Lady of the Camelias," this opera will be performed in English by the Goldov- sky Grand Opera Theatre. Staged with a company of 50, orchestra and chorus, this performance will be the first full operatic pro- duction presented by the University Musical Society. STATE SENATE RACE: Calls Fiscal Reform Crucial Election Issue forces and administers SGC elec- tion regulations, now has formal procedures incorporating due proc- ess to cover cases of possible elec- tion violations. Reviews Candidates The procedures require that the committee review all candidates' petitions for possible violations. If any are found, or if a written and signed complaint about the candi- dates is presented to the committee concerning either election or peti- tioning violations, the committee will hold a hearing. It may then take four actions, all subject to review my SGC, including taking no action, voting for disqualifica- Lion or referring the violator to Joint Judiciary Council. Council approved of revisions in the Assembly Association consti- tution. The principal revision makes, the president of Assembly Association elected by Assembly, House Council instead of by all independent women as was the case. It also changes the name of Assembly Association of Independ- ent Women to just Assembly As- sociation, and the name of As- sembly Dormitory Council to As- sembly House Council. Several operating procedures were also] changed.c Heselton Resigns SGC also accepted the resigna- tion of Frank Heselton, '64, as chairman of the committee on the National Student Association. He will remain as a committee mem- ber, he explained, but does not have the time to devote to the chairmanship. A new chairman was not appointed. Council went into committee of the whole on two occasions. It dis- cussed the actions of Robert How- ard, the Mchigan State Univer- sity Student Government presi- dent, in declining to serve on a committee which would h a v e screened outside speakers who were invited to talk on campus. Later, SGC discussed the dismis- sal of Colorado Daily Editor Gary Althen. No formal motions were made, and this will be brought up at SGC's next meeting. APA Drama Gives Unusual Sound Effects The Association of Producing Artists' current production, George M. Cohan's "The Tavern," is a blend of crashes, hisses, pistol shots and wind sounds. The unusual sound effects are produced by a "storm orchestra," whose members, Rod Bl1ade, Grad, Howard Roy, Grad, and Eligabeth Stearns, Grad, fellowship students working with the APA. The dy- namics produced by this unique ensemble of noise-makers runs from a rumbling to an all-out blast. "The Tavern" is an extravagant- ly constructed spoof of melodra- matic stereotypes. "Hist! Hist" are the first human noises of the play, preceded only by thunder, pistol shot, wind, lightning ad crash. After "Hist! Hist!" playwright Co- han introduces the tavernkeeper, his son, the hired girl, the hired man and finally the central char- acter, the vagabond, who declares, "I'm as harmless as the little or- phan girl that you threatened to turn from your door at dawn." Since Cohan's script contains 45 "crash" cues plus one "terrific crash of thunder" cue, the storm is almost always a leading charatcer in "The Tavern." In its New York opening in 1921, - "The Tavern" greeted an enthu- siasm in its audience which led humorist Robert Benchley to pro- pose its author for president and named him unequivocally "the e named him unequivocally "the greatest man. in the world." BAHA'U'LLAH THE SAVIOUR OF ALL MANKIND David Ryhs Williams, in a Book entitled "World Re- ligions and the Hope for Peace," writes: "Baha'u'l- lah, in t h e judgment of i (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the eleventh in a series of 21 articles featuring the namesakes of the men's residence halls.) By LOUISE LIND We of the world of the 20th Cen- tury, almost sterile of any great religious convictions, can only wonder at the tortured soul who wrote in 1881: "My mind is deeply drawn to- wards preaching. There comes over me a feeling of bitter sorrow that I had not strength enough of body and of character, in 1862, to per- sist in that noblest of human voc- cations. Even history writing seems small business compared with min- istrations to human souls. Ah! these nineteen years of secular life: the bewilderment of them, the small result, the sin, the friv,. olity ! " The man responsible for those words was a man torn between two spheres, the one of the pulpit and the other of the University, lackin gthe physical fortitude re- quired by the first and the con- sistency of temperament demand- ed by the latter. Ill Health Yet a man of no small achieve- ment was this Prof. Moses Coit Tyler of the ill health and capri- cious temperament, for he, more than any other, served to awaken. his country to the study of its own literary history. His time was the interesting per- iod of the last century during which he came into contact with a number of the most noted men of letters in this country and Eng- land. A particularly charming style of writing had drawn him to the Uni- versity's vacant chair of rhetoric and English literature, a position he filled in two periods, 1867-1873 and 1875-1881. Wrote Texts It was in Ann Arbor that Prof. Tyler turned to history as a means toward the study of literature. His works, "History of American Lit- erature, 1607-1765," and "Literary History of the American Revolu- tion," were widely acclaimed as texts on the subject. It seemed for a while indeed, that the scholar of the quick tem- per and extreme sensitivity had found a haven in the midwestern college town. He and his wife lived in a modest dwelling which he called "a nice little? box of a cot- tage" and were relatively happy "as snug as mice." An excerpt dated 1875 from his diary shows Prof. Tyler's almost exuberant attitude towards Ann Arbor. "Home again! Up and out before breakfast in the sweet and still; morning. The tranquility of the place is like balm to my brains and nerves . . . Here I feel I am to spend the rest of my days. I am full of peace..." But the home in which he felt U he was destined to spend the rest of his days fell vacant in 1873 when the professor became the lit- erary editor of the Christian Un- ion under Editor-in-Chief Henry Ward Beecher and again in 1881 when he accepted a place in the history department at Cornell Uni- versity. The latter position he occupied until his death in 1900, an event which robbe dthe academic world of one of its brilliant lecturers, an expert in the art of repartee. Tyler House in East Quadrangle stands as a tribute to his memory. Ielley To View Peace Corps E. Lowell Kelly, chief of the ' Peace Corps' Division of Selection and former chairman of the psy- chology department, will return to the campus to present two talks on the Peace Corps. He will speak at 7:30 p.m. Mon- day and Tuesday in Rm. 3529 SAB. Kelly will also show the new Peace Corps film .about .the work ofavolunteers abroad. His lectures are being sponsored by the Office of Student Affairs. One of his main talks as head of the selection division is to de- velop and apply techniques to as- sure the best selection of Corps volunteers. J Directed by FRAN9OIS TRUFFAUT Starring JEANNE MOREAU AMERICAN PREMIERE 0DAY oors prn FT ER45TAM. a At T 1,,T2:45,2:45,44S,630,81,T10P.M. "Ch rming exciting, lively, and spicy !" ENDING DIAL T QIGHT 2-6264 ,-. --- -- -- .-.......--.CeO. am 'A I S !...A HEART-TWISTER FOR " THOSE WHO LIST TO LOVE!" -- - - -WI-LA- - - - - - - -** -NEW YORK" TIMES By JOHN KELSON ' Fiscal reform is definitely the most pressing and crucial issue in the upcoming state senatorial elec- tion, Prof. Robert J. Niess of the romance languages department, Democratic candidate for state senator from Washtenaw County, told the Young Democratic Club last night. Prof. Niess explained that the solution to all other problems de- pends largely upon a cure to the present fiscal crisis. "Without an effected solution to the fiscal problem, any hope to advance further programs in the areas of education, mental health, and unemployment is doomed," he said. Fiscal Reform "Moreover, fiscal reform is de- manded, if not necessitated by the lack of equity in the present fiscal setup in which too much of a bur- den, and a disproportionate share in the financing of the state's ac- tivities is placed upon those who can least afford it," he said. Every year the state is faced with providing $10 million more in meeting the expanded enroll- ment of secondary schools. Very soon it will find that its institu- tions of higher learning have reached their full capacities, Prof. Niess argued. Mental Care "Further, one out of every 500 children born daily in Michigan is mentally defective," he added. "At the present moment over a thousand of these mentally defect- ed await admission to mental in- stitutions. If this most human of problems is to be ameliorated, the state must again face itself with the task of providing additional funds." Unemployment The unemployment situation in Michigan, also, adds grave respon- sibility to a needed fiscal reform, Prof. Niess explained. "Automation is an accepted fact in our social community; the loss of unemployment resulting from this automation must be planned for and expected. Training pro- grams of the highest order are called for in response to this cris- is. "The state must equip itself, and the voters must responsibly choose to meet these crying needs," he concluded. 'U' Sponsors Soviet Study Professors Gordon C. Brown and Pearl L. Kendrick of the public health school leave for the Soviet Union today. The Regents granted them a one-month leave Wednesday, in order that they may study the USSR's immunization programs and research activities. They are especially interested in Russian efforts to develop multiple-antigen vaccines, which immunize against several diseases in one inoculation. After Newhart,.Attend the HOMECOMING DANCES Michigan Union with Johnny Harberd Orchestra Ballroom Roadrunners-First Floor 10 P.M. -1 A.M. Tickets on diag $1.50/couple for both dances, $2.00 at the door TICKETS NOW ON SALE ON DIAG AND AT UNION DESK I 11 I /n The PERIBERG -SEA TON T j Product/on 0a Suspense-TR ATOR filled!l...' -. f///dl..4 Show Daily so remnarkable 1s15 345 because the 615-8:50 basic plot isE__ TRE I" 7( T IIoR' -LIFE Magazine ] .SATURDAY_ "MARCO POLO" s. G. c. Gi erna FuId TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9:00 Saturday and Sunday at 7:00 and 9:00 BOMBSHELL TRUFFAUT'S Jean Harlow. Lee Tracv. Frank Moraan THE 400 BLOWS many, possessed the tender- ness of St. Francis, the cour- age of Socrates, the meek- ness of Moses, the sanity of Confucius, the missionary vigor of .Mohammed, the I ; _, ,T