THE MICHIGAN DAILY FR COLLEGE ROUNDUP PROGRAM NOTES: Viewers To See Re-Creation of Medieval World By VANCE INGALLS LOS ANGELES-Harmful haz- g policies resulted in the suspen- on of one UCLA fraternity and he other's placement on proba- on. Theta Xi fraternity was sus- ended as a result of a hazing in- dent resulting in the hospitali- ition of a pledge. Seven fraternity ficers were placed on probation >r the remainder of the year. Such practices as the subjection f pledges, to long periods of con- nement and no sleep caused Zeta si fraternity to be placed on )rmal probation. ITHACA - Cornell University's $5.7 million John M. Olin Library, currently under construction, may never be completed, costing the university virtually its entire in- vestment, as the result of a geo- logical blunder. University geologists declared the library site to be "inadequate to support the proposed structure." Consequently, the university has ordered all; work to cease pending further study. The University has already pledged itself, in signed contracts, to over $5 million in jobs con- nected with the proposed library. COLUMBUS-A Student Senate subcommission at Ohio State Uni- versity has established the areas of off-campus housing, student ac- tivities, public relations and dis- criminatory clauses in fraternities and sororities, as areas in which they intend to take action to solve discrimination problems. .* * * L AN S I N G -- Michigan State University's Academic Senate vot- ed this week on the proposition of putting ROTC on a voluntary rather than a compulsory basis. No immediate final decision was reached. Prof. Joseph LaPalom- bara, chairman of the MSU'politi- cal science department recom- mended that ROTC be made vol- untary as soon as is practically possible. He asked for a unani- mous vote. n~ By CAROL LEVENTEN Actors, paintings, medieval music and Prof. Arthur Eastman of the English department will recreate the medieval world in "Steeple in the Sky," this week's Legacy series presentation at noon Sunday on WWJ-TV. Actors will portray the rules of courtly love, the lives of peasants,. monk, knights and merchants. The program will feature accompani- ment by a small medieval orches- tra consisting of two recorders, a dulcimer and bells, in addition to paintings done in the period. Prof. Eastman, narrator of the program, commented that the medieval era was probably the last time in the history of man that the world was undivided - there was, one kingdom on earth domi- nated by the Pope, and aspiring to an eternl or spiritual kingdom. "Thissworld was only a stepping- stone to the next, a pilgrimage . . . in the next world everything would be put aright. The good would be rewarded; the evil damned." V * The Wayne State University Theatre production of, Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" opens at 8:30 p.m. tomor- row (with, additional productions on Nov. 14, 19 and 21) in Detroit. The play, which has been done In all media, is .a classic literary farce. Tickets are .available at the Ticket Office, TEmple 3-1400, ext. 265, in Detroit. Cinema 'udd The New York Pro -Musica, di- rected by Noah Greenberg, will, present a special University Musi- cal Society-sponsored concert at ,1 .i '* Tonight at 7:00 and 9:00 "A hymn to the everlasting beauty of innocence and faith . .. challenges criticism" --Bosley Crowther, N.Y. Times "The Song of Bernadette" with JENNIFER JONES CHARLES BICKFORD ACADEMY AWARD, i' - TOMORROW NIGHT,' HILLELZAPOPPIN Ann Arbor High 8:00 P.M. Free Transportation from Michigan Union-Departing at 7:15 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in Hill Audi- torium. The performers of medieval, renaissance and Baroque music consist of six vocalists and four instrumentalists; their program, will include English madrigals, Eli- zabethan Airs, sacred music of the Renaissance, early Baroque. con- tatas, English instrumental music and ,part songs of the German renaissance. Founded in 1952, the goal of the Pro Musica is the revival of musi- cal, masterpieces composed before the 18th century. It studies and performs compositions by Purcell, Lassus, Fufay, Blow, Monteverdi, Perotin, Isaac Byrd and" others, and secures its material through intensive research into scholarly sources, manuscripts and libraries here and abroad: Tickets are on sale at the Musi- caf Society box dflice in Burton Tower. * * * The works of six younlg Univer- sity composers will be performed at a Composers Forum at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Aud. A, Angell Hall. -Composers are Edwin Coleman, '60; Robert James, .'61; Melvin Kangas, '61; Donald Matthews, '62; Alexander Pollatsek, '61 and Roger Reynolds, '60. W. S. Gilbert's "Rosencrantz and Gilderstein" will be performed at 4 p.m. Nov. 12 in Trueblood Auditorium as part of the speech department sponsored series of laboratory one-acts. * * * The music, school wilTsponsor a concert of cello and piano music at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Henry Honegger, cellist, and Walter Robert, pianist, will per- form works by Couperin, Schubert, Frank Martin, Debussy and De Falla. * * * The speech department is now accepting mail orders for tickets to its next production, Donizetti's opera "don Pasquale." Directed by Prof. ;Jack E. Ben- der of the speech department and Prof. Joseph Blatt of the music school, it will be performed at 8 p.m., Nov. 19-21 in Trueblood Aud- itorium.- - Orders for seats, all of which are unreserved, should include stamped and self-addressed en- velopes, first and second perform-1 ance preferences and checks made payable to Play Production. Re- quests should be adIdressed to Play- bill, Lydia Mendelssohn and all tickets are'priced at one dollar. Mail order tickets are also on sale for John Osborne's "Epitaph for George Dillon," which will be presented Dec. 9-12 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets for this production are available for $1.50, $1.10 and 75c. w EAsmiN COLOR CINEMASCOPE HELD OVER N AGA I N (Through Saturday) DIAL 5-6290 The picture with what it takes to be a real big hit in Ann Arbor! FOR THE MAN WHO HAS EVERYTHING ...AND THE GIRL WHO WOULD LIKE TO ... TONY RAN DALL THEEM Rif ER I NOW! I a + , , ,1 1S1 m ut u u w i r ' DIAL NO 8-6416 " CAME RA MAGIC" Bosley Crowther --N. Y. Vn,*s "PERFECTLY WONDERFUL ... Howord Thompson -N. Y. Times I SHORT:'Faux P'antifice J 01 I L *. SATURDAY AT 7:00 AND 9:00 SUNDAY AT 8:00j "Beautifully made . . . drama is engrossing, performance superb. "-Crowther, N.Y. 'Times "Hardly fit to be a teacher for growing boys, even a teacher of classical languages, which he is." ibid. TERRENCE RATTGAN'S "Th -Browning Version" with MICHAEL REDGRAVE, JEAN KENT FRI. lb SAT. Made plans yet to see NOEL COWARD'S Sparkling, Hilarious NEW COMEDY? "Humor enough to keep an audience in an almost constant chuckle" (N.Y. World Telegram). Movingly told by RAYMOND MASSEY. Featuuing the CeNies of Avericas iaeutest ?hotophers EDWARD WESTON * MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE * ALFRED EISENSTAEDT * WtGEE 0 NUDE directed by William Taylor produced by ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE, Inc. WITH SHORT: A City Decides BOXOFFICE OPEN 10:30-8:15 Phone NO 8-6300 All seats reserved, $1.65 VI OLI N li ~l~llpl/*_ { .., t I ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents Curtain at 8 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE I " TOM LE H R E R ... toast of two, continents ~<< ti : "I ... a Noel Coward of the fifties...' 11 "Ditties could pack 'em in for month of Sundays"-NEWS CHRONICLE "Princess Margaret laughs and laughs-at those blood-curdling songs"- -EVENING STANDARD "Complete sell-out for Tom Lehrer"-DISC "The funniest man in London-on his first visit-is this 31 -year-old ex- math professor from Harvard, who'sings about death and disease and de. struction with joy in a stony heart"-DAILY MAIL 'Gruesome Tom Lehrer-'The Ghoul'-tested his weird wit on a Londor audience last night, and brought the house down"-DAILY HERALD ' >x r r 4 s f 6I ti ",":: is t J :}y :1f1 l C..:S 11 :':1 i ! 'U' Socialists Name Goals By JEAN SPENCER The University Democratic Soci- alist Club elected new officers this week after formulating a state- ment setting forth their principles, goals and program. Michael Mathews, '60M, was elected chairman; David Golden, '63, vice-chairman; Patricia Cous- ens, '61, secretary and John Mag- ney, '60E, treasurer. Mathews remarked that this statement, printed in the club's first newsletter, is the first of its kind. The statement of principles lists two primary aims of the Demo- cratic Socialist Club: 1) To provide a vehicle for the coalescence of all those who, regardless of party affiliation, feel a need for ex- pressing solidarity with the goals of the socialist movement, and 2) to fulfill the need for an outlet for the ideas of socialism on this campus. Names Goal The chief goal of the club is to seek a world in which modern' technology will be used "in the service of man'.rather than for capitalist profit or the Stalinist state." The newsletter statement says that such a society will be estab- lished only when all political, eco- nomic and social decisions rest with the people, and requires the abolition of concentrated wealth and power for a minority. Further, the' club believes that such a society will put an end to "the inequalities and privileges which breed war." Supports lNovement The club's program supports movements for Civil Rights, all democratic organizations fighting for civil liberties, the labor move- ment and the "growing movement to end the cold war and the nu- clear arms race." In the future, the Democratic Socialist Club wishes to bring to the University campus such speak- ers as Norman Thomas, Erich Fromm and A. Philip Randolph, Mathews Concluded. 'At Last! MORE OF TOM, LEHRER, ;3.98 TH 1Z210 South University Sc SHOP NO 3-6922 "Lehrer ditties tickle club fans"-OAKLAND TRIBUNE "Cynic packs house-Lehrer humor a hit" PITTSBURGH SUN-TELEGRAPH "Lehrer convulses audience with storyville spoofs" -CAPE COD STANDARD-TIMES RICHARD TUCKER' LEADING TENOR OF THE METROPOLITAN OPERA in recital FRI., NOV. 6,8:30 }j in HILL AUDITORIUM 'S F.