THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRDAY,MAY Carflonneur4 4 LITERARY WORKSHOP: T~ ~.im....................,:.: iM~uehl Discusses Role of ModernWi BUDGET-MAKER-Ron Peters guarded the money, watched expenditures, and supervised the advertising for The Daily this year. Ron Pdeters Recalls Year As Business, Manager By MORLEY GWIRTZMAN Associate Business Manager tasks may seem, you always see Reflecting" back on his past year your results in the following Reflctig bck n hs pst earmorning's edition. as Daily Business Manager, Ron- According to Ron there are ald Peters remembers most of his three sides to every person-"the "many associations with people," academic, the social, and the busi- both students and merchants. ness." He feels "The Daily busi- The Diually thebusinesson stan at thjoined ness staff has gone a long way in beginning of his sophomore year developing an individual's social was "to meet more people and to An invs working get a better understanding of An individual working on The them." Ron felt that since he Daily learns in a very short time was in engineering school, he the meaning of the word respon- should find time to put away his sibility. slide rule and books. Misses Atmosphere As it turned out, his slide rule Now that the new staffs have proved handy at The Daily this taken over, Ron misses more than year, especially when it was neces- anything else the atmosphere of sary to figure out the monthly 420 Maynard St. "The carefree budget reports. environment of The Daily takes Asks More you away from everything. Al- Ron says college should offer an though the pressure is there, it individual more than just intellec- is enjoyable. College years, es- tual "development. In order to de- pecially the early ones, are quite velop a more "well-rounded per- impressionable," Ron says, having sonality," he thinks students found his three years on The should definitely participate in Daily made a strong impact on his campus activities. . attitudes and views toward his "Activities offer a student a ultimate goals in life. 'second life,' the chance to meet, "These attitudes are a result of associate wtih, and understand the people you associate and work people." He notes that "being able with, and The Daily atmosphere to get along .with people is be is composed of a wide variety of coming increasingly important in backgrounds and presonalities business relations." with conflicting views." The Daily plays a very im- Evans Scholars portant role on campus "as both An active Evans Scholar, Ron a service to the students and as is very grateful to the sponsors a worthwhile campus activity," of this°fraternity for making Ron. says. "The University is a possible his education here. He city within a city, and The Daily is also a member of Alpha Chi in many cases is the student's only Sigma, ,a professional chemistry connecting link with the outside fraternity, and of Triangle and world." Michigamua. Daily Unique Completing his fifth and final As an activity, The Daily is year in chemical engineering next unique in that it allowf the indi- year, Ron likes the idea of fol- vitual to receive an immediate lowing a tightly controlled cur- sense of accomplishment, from riculum which is specially de- the very first day. The nature of signed to give the very basic The Daily is such that no matter courses and allows for more con- what you start out doing, no mat- centrated efforts in one partcular ter how menial the beginning field of study. His long-range goal is to be in *the administrative end of the Daily Classif leds chemical industry. He plans to go on to receive his master's degree Bring Results in business administration at the University. By JUDITH OPPENHEIM "The modern writer must decide clearly whether he wants to write for money or simply to express his ideas," Prof. John F. Muehl of the English department said yes- terday at a discussion workshop on fiction included in the Univer- sity Writers' Conference.- Contemporary magazine as well- as television is becoming "not an educational medium or even an entertainment medium, but an ad- vertising medium," he said. Since advertising constitutes the major portion of a magazine's in- come, it is only natural that much of the writing must be done, "with the advertiser. reading over the writer's shoulder," Prof. Muehl explained. Critical Writing Hard Just as in television, where writers are not supposed to "get people on the edge of their chairs and thinking hard" because this lowers their receptivity to com- mercials, so in magazines it be- comes increasingly difficult for really critical writing, calculated to arouse a strong intellectual re- sponse, to pass the censorship of the editor. One result of the emphasis on "writing to please the advertiser rather than the reader" has led to what Prof. Muehl termed the "formula short story." Many of the leading national magazines repeatedly publish stories with identical, marked characteristics, leading to the ex- pressions "New Yorker stories" or "Saturday Evening Post stories." Writer Must Decide But this restriction upon writ- ing is not entirely bad for the writer, since it forces him to decide whether he wants to be a professional writer or one who simply writes for his own enjoy- ment. For those who want to become professional writers, Prof. Muehl recommended studying the trends in the writing market and analyz- ing the needs in new fiction. It is a rare coincidence, however, when a work of fiction written mainly for the writer's own expression is also a financial success. Prof. John Heath-Stubbs, visit- ing professor in the English de- cussed his poem, "Churchyard of St. Mary Magdalene, Old Mil- ton." 'Blackout' Often Occurs Prof. Heath-Stubbs chose this particular poem for dsicussion be- cause "I was to some extent con- scious of how it was put together." After writing poetry, a "typeHof blackout" often prevents the writer from recalling afterwards exactly how he constructed his poem, he added. For this reason, better poetry is on the whole the easiest to write since it requires less conscious ef- fort on the part of the writer. Prof. Heath-Stubb's poem de- scribes the churchyard in a small English village where his father is buried. Describes Objective World It was written ten years ago after Prof. Heath-Stubbs visited the village and was due partly to "a deliberate impulse to write a poem describing something in the objective world I intimately knew." It begins with an objective de- scription and from this descrip- tion, moves to a development and expansion of mythical symbols. He explained some of the par- ticular symbols he had used in the poem and described his at- tempt to expand upon them by the use description. Speaking on comparative litera- ture, Prof. Glauco Cambon of the English department said that the current invasion of American lit- erature in Europe is not simply the consequence of the second world war. Look for Trends Prof. Cambon remarked that European writers, translators, and men of letters tend to look for specific trends and revelations in American literature. American poets Walt Whitman and Edgar Allen Poe are highly regarded by many Europeans. Whitman in particular was a prime inspiration to the German expressionists, the Russian futur-. ists, French existentialists and many Italian writers. Whitman often represents the attitude of health, rejuvenation and abundance of space and op- portunity for which America is so well known, Prof. Cambon com- mented. "I wouldn't want to live in a world that excluded the dimension of poetry," Prof. Cambon said, and went on to explain that American poetry is currently the greatest literary object of foreign interest. American poetry is experimen- tal and has a cosmopolitan quality because so much of it is written by the children and grandchildren of immigrants who know the ways of the old world as well as the new. Prof. Cambon has translated the works of many American au- thors into Italian, particularly the stories of William Faulkner. His favorite of the books he has trans- lated is Faulkner's "Absalom Ab- salom." Prof. Robert F. Haugh of the English department presided over the workshop session. Confiwnment. Denouneed (UPS)-Students from over 24 New England colleges marched on Concord, Mass, at 11 a.m. Satur- day in protest to the imprison- ment of Willard Uphaus. Uphaus is being jailed fdr with- holding the names of suspected subversives who once attended a summer camp he sponsored. Among the participating col- leges were students from Dart- mouth, Harvard, Smith, Mount Holyoke; Amherst, Yale, Radcliffe, Brandeis, Northeastern, Benning- ton, and the Universities of Mas- sachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont. I Once Again. 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