THE MICHIGAN DAILY "t7 11Y'"ir1" t fAfQw l~w r w "E TC TA II. V " %fENS D,%Y. NOVEMBER 4, 1959 9 iAACP To View Northwestern; Cornell Bans Hazing By VANCE INGAILLS I, r WEEKEND OF WORK: Experimentalist Explains Short-TermC ourses' -David Giltrow HYDE PARK--Topics ranging from the seal on the Diag to world1 capitalism were aired on the Diag yesterday. Hyde Park Dissertations, Touch on Many Areas I 4 (Continued from Page 1) I Regents' ruling gives SGC the power to throw housing groups off campus, he said, it is the na- tional organizations that are re- sponsible for discrimination. A current SGC member gained the stand and howled, "The Daily said on Sunday that we can't sup- port these 12 SGC candidates and on Tuesday it said to support them." "If The Daily was mistaken and irresponsible on Sunday, it could be mistaken and irresponsible on Tuesday as well," the irate SGC member cried. "How about incompetence in SGC?" a spectator piped up. 'Best of Bad Lot' "SGC is the best of a bad lot of student organizations," was the reply, "whether it be IHC, IFC, The Daily, League- Members of SGC should not represent their own opinions, he went on, or even reflect those of the campus at large, because the campus doesn't have one. "The campus elects a govern- ment to make its opinions," he maintained. "And on SGC, I do what I think best for the Univer- sity community as a whole." Laments Diag Benches Another student jumped on the. stand anxious to air his major complaint: the four benches sur- rounding the seal on the Diag. "What has happened to tradi- tionalism?" he cried, referring to the implication of freshmen flunk- ing exams if they step on the seal. After this brief respite, SGC again took the spotlight. One candidate declared the cam- paign rules make it -almost im- possible to get ideas across in SGC open houses-the candidate runs in and out. Runs on 'Things' "I am running on four things, not ideas: responsibility, maturity, cooperation and consideration." The crowd immediately asked him to define his terms. His reply was interrupted, so he ,skipped this and began advo- cating, eliminating some of the events on the overcrowded calen- dar. "Education here is becoming more difficult," he insisted. "Stu- dents will soon have to put out a third more effort for the same grade. If we don't stop calendaring events, the administration will take away the students' power to -do this." Against Drinking Laws One student gained the platform and shouted that the University drinking law should say the Uni- versity knows it cannot hope to enforce the drinking age and that only the students, acting undesir- ably will 'be penalized. "The University cannot expect to do any niore than this," he con- cluded. Skipping to another topic and another speaker, one student ex- claimed that when the state and school take away our gambling privileges, it is time to do some- thing. "I would like to see a represen- tative from every class hold a meeting to organize betting. "From here we can organize the entire Big Ten," he cried. 'Playing Politics' Next subject on the stand was the state financial crisis. One stu- dent declared that the "whole Legislative crowd is playing poli- tics." An SGC candidate urged stu- dents to write home to parents telling them to write to the legis- lators about supporting the school. Finally, one serious minded stu- dent drew a gathering and ex- pounded on democracy and capi- talism. "If the capitalistic system failed in the U.S., it should not hinder our devotion to democracy." "I am not satisfied with the economic structure of any place in the world," he continued, "but we have better tools to correct ours than anywhere else." By NORMA SUE WOLFE Forty-eight hours is a suffi- ciently long period to teach the essence of any subject from the art of metal 'working to analysis of a Beethoven Quartet or Shake- speare, an English experimentalist in adult education believes. Sir George Trevelyan, warden of Shropshire Adult College near Shrewsbury, England, explained the function of "short - term courses" in a lecture here Monday. "The short-term residential col- lege. acts as a yeast in people's lives," Trevelyan said. Just as yeast works rapidly through a loaf of bread, brief courses can "leaven the whole life of an individual," he believes. .Offered to All At the Shropshire Adult Col- lege, courses are offered to any adult "from any walk of life." The students there need no qualifica- tions for admittance, gain no credits and take no tests. But 48 hours is a highly sig- nificant length in the course of a person's life, Trevelyan asserted. He cited the example of an analysis of Beethoven's Quartet- Opus 59 No. 3, which was offered this past weekend at Shropshire. Trevelyan called the study "a strange experience--a hiatus out of time." At'the end of the program, stu- dents are "swept away by under- standing," he claimed. Eventually, the adults "kick out of it and go home, but they are changed and enriched. Adds Depth "Possession of knowledge of the Quartet makes them deeper per- sons," Trevelyan said. Shropshire College Is one of 20 residential colleges in England de-, signed to resolve two problems at once, he explained. The first is the post-war interest in adult educa- tion and the second, a means of preservation of "great houses," which could not be financially supported. Trevelyan and other inspired educators'combined the problems and found a solution: conducting courses in an "atmosphere fitting for adult education,"-the coun- try houses. Number 65 A maximum number of 65 stu- dents move into the houses for a weekend of study, which "begins with tea on Friday and ends with tea Sunday." Instructors, who are borrowed from "anywhere" and rewarded with a "modest salary," must have both academic knowl- edge and the power to talk, Tre- velyan said. These talks are not, "watered- down university lectures," he stressed. "There is a form of lec- turing that is an art in its own right- finding ideas which will fire the imagination and deepen the vision of all adult students." These students and instructors are all "fired by the notion of gathering people together in fine architecture for intellectual crea- tivity," he added. "Our obvious purpose, then, is Group Fills JGP Positions All central committee positions for the Junior Girls Play have been filled, Doris Jay, '61, general chairman of JGP announced yes- terday. The Interviewing and Nominat- ing Committee of the League has named Ann Cromwell. '61, as as- sistant general chairman, Susan Kreisler, '61, as head of campus publicity, and Anne Wells, '618M, as music chairman. The musical-comedy to be pre- sented on March 17, 18, 19 is "What Can You Lose," an original production written by the junior to stir imaginations--to touch the humanities that appeal to all sorts of people, from nobility to the country people who claim, 'Well, dash it, I haven't read a book for 20 years.'" Trevelyanr said he can usually predict attendance at various pro- grams through implementing the philosophy of a "quest for the more permanent knowledge." Archaeol- ogical -and practical art courses attract a full house, while music might yield a response of 50 adults, Shakespeare 40 and discussions on single books or current affairs only 12 to 15. "An aged: man is but a paltry thing unless the soul clap its hands and sing, and therefore I sailed' the seas. . . ." Trevelyan quoted' in conclusion. Plan Panel Discussion A panel discussion, "A Looking Glass of Conflicting Goals," will be held at 7:15 p.m., today, in the Hussey Rm. of the League. Those participating will be Uni- versity President Harlan Hatcher, Dean of Women Deborah Bacon, Dean of the-literary college Roger Heyns, and Assistant Dean of Nursing, Mrs. Norma Marshall. The discussion is part of "Wom- en's Week," lasting from Monday through this Sunday. Architect .Set Center. Plans Milton Fischer, a partner of the Washington, D.C. architectural fim, Corning and Moore, ,will ex- plain his approach to the solving of an architectural problem at 3 p.m. today in the auditorium of the architecture building. The example to be cited in his lecture is a new' educational cen- ter of the American Association of University Women in Washington,. Contract documents, which are displayed in the exhibition spaces of the building, depict the coor- dination of the ideas of 150,000 members of the AAUP. Fischer received his Bachelor of Architecture from the University in 1933, and was awarded a schol- arship of the Erhard foundation. He is a member of the American Institute of Architects and of the American Institute of Planners. He has previously been associat- ed with Henry Wright, Fellow of the AIA and the National Hous- ing Agency. His principal works include the award-winning B'nai Brith Build- ing and the Maryland National Park and Planning Commission Building. s 1 -w TH UR., FRI., "Smartest Comedy of the ason" SAT. DIAL 5-6290 HELD OVER AGAIN (Through Saturday)' The picture' with what it takes to be a real big hit in Ann Arbor! 1 FOR THE MAN WHO HAS EVERYTHING ... AND THE GIRL WHO WOULD LIKE TO ..., ;-(N.Y. Daily Mirror) NOEL COWARD'S "NUDE WITH VIOLIN" directed by Wn. Taylor IN EASTMAN COLOR CII EMASCOP9 TONY RANDAL. THELN RJER girls. _: INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION Presents mTonte Car/o ai CAMPUS-WIDE DANCE Gambler's Paradise PRIZES - REFRESHMENTS -GAMES Music by DICK TILKIN 9-12 Sat., Nov. 7 Union Ballroom Tickets available on the Diag, at Engine Arch, International Center, and the Union. ORCHESTRAS by. BUD-MOR featuring Johnny Harberd Men of Note Dick Tilkin Bob Elliott Andy Anderson Al Bloser Vic Vroam Earle Pearson The Kingsmen Dale Seeback plus many others 11103 S. Univ. NO 2-6362 Produced by ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE, Inc. All seats reserved Thur. $1.50, Fri. & Sat. $1.65 Box office open.10:30-5:30 Phone NO 8-63000 LYDIA MEN DELSSOH N TH EATRE 4 I I U -, I TOMORROW THE YOUNG DEMOCRAT CLUB I I ENDING TONIGHT oyam PRESENTS -A DIAL NO 2-6264 .o MRY WAD'S mhtfa PH4l ID A HART E HOPE LMNE . ..A