Friday, October 4, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Undergrad English majors Italian request department changes govt. r Ry STEPHEN HE .SH The first meeting of the Eng- lish Undergraduate Association (EUA) last night produced sug- gestions for small student-de- signed classes and discussion groups, a student-run English counseling service, a lounge open to undergrad English ma- jors, and a broadening of the present program of guest poets and writers. Held in the poshly panelled and carpeted West Conference Room of Rackham, the meeting attracted approximately 35 pres- ent and potential English ma- pors and a handful of pro- fessors. JEFF SEGALL, '74, one of the two organizers of the meet- ing, suggested an alternative to regular courses offered by the department. "Small groups of students," he commented, "say, 10 people who are intercsted in discussing or studying the same works, could find a professor who would be willing to meet with them several times a mouth. They could meet at a student's home or at the pro- fessor's home. "I think at classes or dis- cussion meetings like that," he added, "people would be able to explore exactly what they're in- terested in, and the atmosphereI would be more relaxed than in the usual classroom." Segall suggested that a stu- dent lounge would be a valu- able addition to the department. "There's no place for us to meet one another and talk," he said, "and the only place for us to talk with our professors is in their offices." SEGALL ALSO noted that the department may be willing to co-er the cost of bringing more poets and writers to the Unix er- sity, to read their work and talk with students. Several s t u d e n ts criticized some of their English professors for being aloof and unwilling to spend time talking with them o tside of classes. "I think of professors as my colleagues," commented one student. "When they consider themselves some- how above me, it's difficult to talk with them.'' Paul Smythe, '75, another of the meeting's organizers, claim- ed that the present student counseling service offers inade- quate information on English coyrses and suggested that an efficient student-run English de- partment counseling s e r v i c e would be useful to people un- familiar to the department. SEVERAL students comnlain- ed to the professors that lower le'el courses are generally un- stim-lating. Prof. Bob Weisb'Ich sqozested that more students attend the department's curric- 111--planning meetings to make their views known. The EUA will meet again in two weeks. Organizers say they olan to form two committees, one to begin setting ip a course eval-ntion system, and another to begin introducing discussion groans and poetry readings. (olapses (Continued from Page 1) Soci=list and Social Democrat parties as. partners. The outlook was for a pro- longed political crisis since there was no immediately vis- ible alternative to the outgoing center-left coalition formula. SUCH A CRISIS can only harm the process of Italy's economic recovery, now begin- nine to take shape. The government's fall was do' blv embarrassing following President Giovanni Leone's re- turn from a state visit to the UT.. .where he repeatedly under- lined that the popular picture of Italy as permanently on the brink of economic and political chans was very wide off the mark. I mmediate responsibility for the eovernment's collapse lies with the Social Democrat party, whose leader, Mario Tananssi, declared the coalition dead last Tesday, alleging that the So- cialists had sabotaged it. Tanassi was referring to re- neated calls by the Socialists for a radical change in the country's present deflationary economic policies which, they said, were unfairly biased against the working class and the poor. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM S presents i cTAeYIrep Sisters by Anton Chekhov directed by Boris Tumarin OCTOBER 17 T ROUGH 20 Love's Labour's Lost by William Shakespeare directed by Gerald Freedman OCTOBER 24 THROUGH 27 EIMAIR I'[ by Christopher Marlowe directed by Ellis Rabb OCTOBER 31 rITiROUG INOVEMBER 3 The Time 4 Your I ife by William Saroyan directed by Jack O'Brien NOVEMBER 7 THROUGH 10 Nixon burls strong language at pliotog ly AP and Reuter LONG BEACH - A reported incident between a newspaper photographer and former Presi- dent Richard Nixon in the corri- dors of the Long Beach Memor- ial Hospital where he has been hospitalized for 12 days showed he has lost none of his pen- chant for the strong epithets re- vealed in the edited White House tapes. Photographer Kent Hender- son said that when Nixon spot- ted him waiting in the corridor to take a picture as the former president came out of an x-ray laboratory, Nixon shouted: "You goddam son-of-a-bitch." HE ND E R S O N, a pho- tographer for a Long Beach ENELSSOHN ThEATRE--TICKET INFORMATION - (313) 764-04150 newspaper, said Nixon was rap- idly wheeled away. The photog- ranher said he was so startled by the enithet he failed to take his nicture. "The door opened about two- thirds of the way and the foot of the wheelchair came out," Henderson said. "I heard him say, 'You goddamn son-of-a- bitch' and I saw his face. It was contorted. He looked pretty teed-off." Henderson said Nixon, wear- ing a bathrobe, reached out and closed the lab's swinging doors as attendants pulled his wheelchair back inside the lab- oratory. The doors crashed against the wheelchair. He never re-emerged. SUSCRIPTIONS ONLY UNTIL OCTOBER 12TH., 2 -4% SAVINGS SGC approves plan (Continued from Page 1) behavior and the reactionary and racist attacks on minority people" by the Council and theI student body at large. The loss of the Fishmans puts SGC membership at 13, down from 38 in fall 1973. The Council also stressed the 5 p.m. filing deadline today for all those interested in running for Council seats. CURRENT PLANS for the Oct. 15-17 election include es- tablishment of 10 polling places and use of "independent clergy'" to count ballots. The latter detail met with skepticism from Coordinating Vice President David Faye, who commented, "I'd trust one se- curity guard over any number of flying nuns." Acting Treasurer Elliot Chi- kofosky announced that SGC was financially "in the black" for the first time since at least spring of 1972. This came de- spite the alleged misuse of funds by former President Lee Gill. Surprise soneone spec1il with a itbs et gift! A iov to receive for any occasion. Easy to send! Just call us for immediate delivery here in town or many miles away. Our affiliation with Telefood Specialists throuqhout the country assures you of the same quality and personal serv- ice for your out-of-town orders, that we provide in our own store. 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