a THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,A Appoints Executive Vice-President ACROSS CAMPUS I FREDERICH SCHILLER-Subject of much discussion this week, his bicentennial anniversary, the poet-dramatist has his own display in the Undergraduate Library. Firede rich Schiller Discussedy ane d b The New York Pro Musica, per- formers of medieval, renaissance, and baroque music, will give a concert at 8:30 p.m. tonight at the Rackham Lecture Hall. - The group, which consists of six vocalists and four instrumentalists conducted by Noah Greenberg, is sponsored by the University Musi- cal Society. The program will include Eng- lish madrigals, Elizabethian arias, Renaissance sacred music, early baroque cantatas, English instru- mental music, and German -renais- sance part songs. Tickets are available at the University Musical Society ticket office in Burton Tower. * * * Robert Dolling Wells of Seattle will speak on "Christian Science Lifts the Burden of Mortality" at 8 p.m. today at the University Elementary School Auditorium. The lecture by Wells, a member of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship, will be held under the auspices of the University's Chris- tian Science Organizatiop. It will be free of charge. Tryouts for the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre production of Shaw's "Major Barabara" will be held from 7:39-9:30 tonight, tomorrow and Thursday in Rm. D210 of Ann Arbor High School. Students are invited to audition for the cast, and rehearsals will be scheduled to accommodate those who will' be out of town during Christmas holidays. Fraternity Narnes Fall Pledge List The following men are members of the Phi Sigma Delta fall pledge class: Arthur Cohen, '62, Marshall Friedman, '63, Richard Greenberg, '63, Allen Gray, '63, Barry Kipnis, '63E, Richard Landy, '63, Gerald Lasky, '63, James Lipton, '63. Also, Thomas Lipton, '63, Law- rence Melamed, '63, David Miller, '63, Peter Myerson, '62, Sol Pela- vin; '63, Jeffrey Slone, '63, Ray- mond Sneider, '63Ph., and James Wechsler, '63. These names were not includ- ed in the list of fraternity pledges run in The Daily last week. "Major Barabara," directed by Jerry Sandler, will be performed Jan. 14, 15 and 16 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The Dramatic Arts Center will present a program of readings at 8:30 p.m. Friday in Lane Hall. Reginald Terry, Grad., will give an interpretive , reading of selec- tions by Dylan Thomas and D. H. Lawrence, and the DAC Playread- ing Group, diretted by Prof. Mar- vin Diskin, will give a concert reading of J. M. Synge's "Shadow of the Glen" and the prologue to Archibald MacLeish's "J.B." Sat., Nov..14-8:30 P.M. Ann Arbor Folk & Jazz Society presents AN EVENING wasted WITH TOM LEHUEB ANN ARBOR HIGH -- ALL SEATS RESERVED Tickets: $4.40, $3.30, $2.75, $2.20, $1.65 tax inc. on sale at BOB MARSHALL'S, 211 S. STATE Dr. Zhivago' Discussion Postponed, The "Dr. Zhivago" seminar has been postponed to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in the Underclass Hon- ors Lounge of the Undergraduate Library. The discussion, originally sched- uled for 4 p.m. Thursday, will be led by Prof. Marvin Felheim of the English department. Prof. Fel- heim will discuss the problem of the artist within society as treated in "Dr. Zhivago." r 11 By MILDA GINGELL The poetry of one of the greatest of the German dramatists and writers, Frederich Schiller, was discussed yesterday in a sympos- ium led by Prof. Martin Dyck of the German department. Prof. F. B. Wahr, professor emeritus, opened the discussion by declaring that Schiller was a cor- nerstone of German culture. "As a poet, I don't know if he suits the tastes of the modern generation, but he was one of the foremost poets of German culture and a great lyric poet of lis own generation," Prof. Wahr continued. He next brought up the ques- tion: is Schiller great as a poet' and is he a lyrical poet? By discussion among panel mem- bers and members of the audience it was concluded that although he has written several lyrical poems, they lack depth and are too dis- cursive. Discuss Art Emery George of the German department said that "a work of art tells us something about our- selves and the world through an emotional experience." Elaborating on Schiller's effec- tiveness, Prof. T. G. Winner of the Slavic languages department said that few Western writers and no Western poet has had such a great effect on Russia. "At this time Russia was in need of the revolutionary ideas and asthetic theories of Schiller where- as most nations had put these qualities behind them; perhaps this accounts for the wide accept- DIAL NO 2-6264 '&Ends Wednesday ance of his poetry in Russia," con- tinued Prof. Winner. Challenged Life Prof. Wahr noted that Schiller knew real life and that he chal- lenged life. 'Although he led a brooding life and felt impinged upon and inhibited most of the time, he built up a vision of a better world to come. He wanted philosophical free- dom over political freedom, al- though his poems may be inter- preted to apply to political situa- tions, he said. Commenting on the emotional nature of Schiller's works, Prof. R. C. Blake of the psychology de- partment said that Schiller was strongest in his dramatic ability. His plays are intensely emotional, not just thought out, and the pres- ent generation does not appreciate his intense uncontrolled emotion- alism." Another panel member, Prof. G. Cambon, visiting lecturer in the English department, emphasized the dramatic nature of Schiller's poetry as opposed to its lyrical qualities. Plans Made Other plans forcelebration of the Schiller bicentennial include a symposium to be held at 8:30 p.m. today at the Cass Theatre in De- troit. Prof. Dyck, along with fac- ulty members of Wayne and Mich- igan State Universities and the University of Detroit will partici- pate. Prof. Mathijs Jolles of the Uni- versity of Chicago will lecture on Schiller at 4:15 p.m., Monday, in Rackham Amphitheatre. A Schiller exhibit is currently on display in the lobby of the Under- graduate Library. LSA Position On Committee Now Available Petitioning for membership on the literary college steering com- mittee is now open, Phillip Zook, '60, has announced. The petitions are available in 1220 Angell Hall, the Office of the Assistant Dean, and must be re- ceived by the committee no later than noon Wednesday, Nov. 25. Interviewing for the vacant po- sitions on the committee will take place after the Thanksgiving va- cation. 'Te steering committee is com- posed of undergraduate students who meet once a week primarily to discuss and evaluate literary college policies and practices, par- ticularly in the curriculum. SOW DIAL NO 8-64 , -r Limited Engagement TODAY THROUGH THURSDAY MIDWEST PREMIERE Special ternationaMONG ,. Week "Eloquent ttraction 11 --Mich. Da 16 " oily mn A GILBERT and SULLIVAN SOCIETY'S "YEOMAN of the GUARD" ': i ~R NI NNERSAL')NTERNATINAL PICTURE S'.A ND s~ . SA'NROCK HUDSON -LAUREN BACALL ROBERT STACK. DOROTHY MALONE ROBERT KEITH- A UNIVERSAL-INIERNATIONAL PICTURE * Thursday * "SAMSON & DELILAH" Mori modern 9azz scow featuring Chris Connor Dave Brubeck Dave Lamber & his Quintette Chico Hamilton & Quintette Maynard Ferguson and his four-piece orchestra 4 # ,: i i