PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 14,1968 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, 1968 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 5) General Dynamics - Convair, Elec- tronics & Stromberg-Carlson. Po- mona Div. & Fort Worth Div. General Motors Corp. Kennecott Copper Corp. - Western Mining Div. PPG Industries-Chemical Div. G. T. Schieldahl Co. Wyandotte Chemicals Corp. U.S.vAirforce Contract Management Div. U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency- Civilian Personnel. Div. Make appt. at Bureau of Appts.-3200 SAB) Engineering placement meeting: No. 4 "Success on the Job." Common dif- ficulties of transition from school to work and how to avoid them. Fourth of four meetings, Professor J. G. Young, January 16, 4:00 p.m. in Room 229 West Engineering Building, and 7:30 In Room 311, West Engineering Build- ing. (Afternoon and evening meetings will be the same). WAYNE STUDENTS APATHETIC: Newspaper-Administration Arguments Leave Future of 'South End' in Limbo Interdisciplinary Area Centers (I i* *MN5~A 4 ~ b3 b* - "1 /e/ o[, pu/ GU/ IT vl eu (Continued from Page 1) At first, it didn't cover the Wayne campus very well, but it has acceded to demands for news coverage of all aspects of the Wayne community. It carries an unidentified columnist who signs his incendiary pieces "A. Vio- lence," and its political stripe veers strongly to the left of center. Some have accused it of creating stories by simply making false charges, while others defend it as the stu- dents' only protector. And, as the result of the Daily Collegian-South End metamor- phosis, Johnston-with whom, says Fisk, "working is like trying to reason with a porcupine"- has earned some enemies. Among them is William R. Keast, Wayne's pres- ident and the man Wayne stu- dents insist keeps Sells around as "his boy." Also among Johnston's enemies was his own business manager, Mike Miciek, who finally quit the paper to work for The Phoenix. And that's where the sticky problem began. Sells insists that the controversy that broke out in late November was over financial, not editorial, matters. "Art lacked any kind of fiscal responsibility," Sells says. The South End's budget (which comes from an anticipated $64,000 in advertising and an equal amount in subsidy from the school in the form of student activities fees), called for 150 issues for the current school year. At the time, Sells maintained that the paper would run out of money by Febru- ary. Early in November, Johnston himself admitted that the Febru- ary date was a possibility, andthat he really had no idea where the money would be coming from. This situation was aggravated further by Johnston's relations with Miciek, an ex-marine who- understandably-did not get along well with Johnston. Added to this was the strange-bedfellow con- figuration at Wayne, whereby the editor is picked by the SFC, while the busines manager is officially an appointed employe of the Dean of Students. The upshot was Sells' action of Nov. 29 when, in his function of being "ultimately responsible" for the business activities of the paper, he ordered cutting the size of that day's issue to eight pages, when it had been originally plan- ned for 12. Johnson's reaction was immediate: on the morning of Nov. 30, he bannered across the front page a quote from Sells: "I don't like the way you're run- ning things." Johnson claims that Sells' "ec- onomy move" was editorial cen- sorship; Sells denies this vehe- mently. Similarly, he - denies charges that he has aided The Pheonix in its attempts to estab- lish itself as a competitor for The South End. "We can't have a policy of helping anyone who comes out with a newspaper and asks for administration support; we have to stick with what we've got," Sells says. The South End views things dif- ferently. One member of the staff says that "Sells may not be giving The Phoenix money directly, but we know that he's helping ar- range ,for gifts from alumni. The Phoenix published $5000 worth of papers last quarter, and they sure didn't have that kind of ad- vertising." FOLK CONCERT TONIGHT 8:00 p.m. Aud. A 75c presented by VIETNAM FALL Sells, however, sticks by his own account. In fact, he points out, "The Phoenix is dying. They haven't been able to publish this quarter and I don't think they will." South Enders say that this is because Sells' fund-raising ef- forts have failed entirely. So Wayne State, for better or worse, is left with The South End, whose advertising revenues have been climbing steadily since their new business manager came in. Miciek's business school frater- nity, meanwhile, delivered papers for The Phoenix last quarter. This quarter, no one at The Phoe- nix offices can say whether or not their sheet will be back on the streets. i The student body has reacted to the whole situation without missing a step. When The Phoe- nix was publishing, students would pick up both papers at the free distribution boxes on campus, and few got involved either physically or emotionally in the dispute. Alan Fisk takes it in stride, at- tributing it to the "commuter syn- drome." On Wayne's campus, where only 11 per cent of the student body lives within two miles of the class- room buildings, Wayne problems and Wayne affairs are forgotten as soon as the student turns onto either the John Lodge or Edsel Ford expressways and heads for home. Whatever the eventual result of the long-standing grudge match between Sells and Johnston, there is considerable doubt whether it will have any long range effects: at the end of the spring quarter in June, a new editor will replace Art Johnston. The South End may stay the same, but it is equally possible that WSU administrators may once more be able to sit back and relax with a copy of the safe, clean, All-American Daily Col- legian. (Continued from Page 1) for sixty years and ultimately led to the publication of the book '"Village Japan." During this project many of the members of the center were "roommates for a year or more in Japan," according to Beardsley, and this experience promoted a feeling of unity in the center whichdhelped in the preparation of a good interdisciplinary course on Japan at the University, The center is presently involved in preparing the results of a sec- ond field study, on the political modernization of Japan, for pub- lication. In addition, such work as a massive survey of the political preferences of younger Japanese, a study of Japanese music, and a study of genetic effects of con- sanguineous marriages-those be- tween close relatives which are common in some areas of Japan- on the national mortality rate. Ford Foundation Grants The four other area centers were organized in 1961 under five- and ten-year Ford Foundation grants. With the five-year grants re- newed in 1966, the Ford monies alone exceed $3 million. The centers also receive ap- proximately $300,000 annually from the Office of Education of the Department of Health Educa- tion and Welfare under the 1958 National Defense Education Act (NDEA). Much of this money comes in the form of National De- fense Foreign Language (NDFL) fellowships. Occasionally a private or gov- ernmental agency such as the U.S. Agency for International Develop- ment of the State Department will request a member of an area cen- ter to do a short-term study on a particular problem. The Center for South and South- east Asian Studies received $55,000 in 1967 alone from the Office of Education under NDEA, an amount which must be matched by the University. Despite fear in some corners that the futuree of the NDEA program is unsure, Prof. Gayl Noess, director of the Asian center, says "We have no indica- tion that these funds will de- crease." He cites as evidence the fact that funds have been increas- ing steadily since the center first began receiving NDEA funds in 1964. Sources of Conflict Members of the Asian center are involved in many projects includ- ing a study of the sources of non- cold-war conflict in Southeast Asia, and an investigation of the role of the Philippines in World War II, as well as a study of the origins of the Vietnam conflict. Experts working through the Center for Chinese Studies have a serious problem completing their work since Communist China is closed to Americans. According to Prof. Alexander Ekstein, director of the area center, said "There is no record of an American scholar receiving a visa to enter China," but he adds that researchers no longer have trouble getting Amer- ican passports for their work in other areas. Secondary sources, then, provide much of what is known about China. The center has agents in Southeast Asia to obtaiii legal journals and other publications. Researchers may speak with refu- gees in Hong Kong, foreign cor- respondents stationed in Peking and Oriental businessmen to learn more about the country. Research on Communism In addition, much has been learned about the Chinese from the Japanese, according to. Ek- stein, because there is a good deal of cultural exchange between the two countries. Nationalist China is important to research concern- ing the Communists because many documents on Communist Party history are housed there. Prof. William D. Schorger, direc- tor of the Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies, and his associates are having a good deal of trouble doing work in that politically tense part of the world. "It is hard to maintain a long- term, well-structured project in the area," says Schorger. None- theless, studies are being made of * some of the tribes which have been isolated from modernizing influ- ences. One study is attempting to determine the effects of the French-style agriculture which was imposed upon the area in earlier times. Faculty Additions The Ford grants have enabled the addition of approximately 30 faculty members, bringing the total number of faculty associated with the area centers to 140. The grants have helped both salaries and ex- penses for the faculty. In addition, over 100 graduate students are seeking degrees through programs created by the centers. Many are supported through Ford moneys or NDFL scholarships. Members of the area centers "are not a separate faculty," says Grassmuck. Each faculty membe# is hired by his respective depart- ment to insure quality personnel, and stays affiliated with the de- partment. Though apparently not the rich- est area center, the Center for Russian and East European Stu- dies did .receive $117,000 last year alone from the Office of Educa- tion. These funds and two five- year grants from Ford totaling $550,000 are being used to study the diplomatic confrontations be- tween the United States and the Soviet Union, the nature of the consumption schedule of the Soviet4 Union, nationalism in Hungary and education in Yugoslavia. Each area center has set aside a considerable portion of its bud- get to improve its library facil- ities. The second Ford grant expires, in 1971 and the area centers have been warned that it will not be renewed. Congress passed the In- ternational Education Act, which Would have continued the funding of such programs, but budget cuts left the act unfunded. "There is nation-wide concert over international studies," said Grassmuck. "We have more leeway than most," since the University's Ford grant expires later, he added. Nonetheless, researchers involved in international studies at the Uni- versity look rather ominously to- wards the future. i * d I. 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