THE MICHIGAN DAILY POETRY AND JAZZ-Harlem poet Iangston Hughes will combine with Tony Scott (above) and his quartet Saturday night in an attempt to "bring poetry back to a broader public appreciation." Hughes, Scott Present Poetr and Jazz Conert SCIENCE: 'U' Joins Research Institution The University has joined 12 other educational institutions in proposing the establishment of a National Institute for Atmos- pheric Research dedicated toward a greater understanding of the earth's weather. In a report tothe National Sci- ence Foundation, the 13 institu- tions urged some $71,000,000 over a five year period for basic at- mospheric research. See Central Group Tbe 13 institutions, which have formed the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, envi- sion a centralized activity ulti- mately using the talents of more than 100 top scientists from a number of fields. The Institute would have its own laboratories, airplanes, a computer facility, a radiation probing facility and a shop where research equipment couldbe manufactured and as- sembled. Prof. E. Wendell Hewson of the engineering department said the Institute "would be concerned ex- clusively with basic research, the search for new knowledge and understanding." No site has been designated as yet. Study Heat Budget With reference to the heat budget problem in the tropical latitudes, the report said that the Institute's flight facility could help fill a large gap in our knowl- edge in this area. It said by con- ducting "expedition" type experi- ments over this portion of the globe, more data could be gath- ered to fill add to our sparse knowledge of this area. In addition to the University, other participating universities are: Johns- Hopkins, Wisconsin, Chicago, New York, Florida State, Arizona, Texas A. and M., Cali- fornia at Los Angeles, Pennsyl- vania, Cornell, St. Louis, and Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. J-Hop Board Positions Open To Petitoers Petitioning for 11 positions on the 1961 J-Hop Central Commit- tee is open through Monday, Mur- ray Feiwell, 1960 general chair- man, announced yesterday. Forms are available from 3-5 p.m. daily in Rm. 2534 of the Stu- dent Activities Bldg. for general c h ai r m a n, two publicity co- chairmen, art director, secretary, and committee heads for tickets, decorations, finance, programs and patrons, special events, bands and building and grounds." Change in the Central Com- mittee include the additions of art director and secretary and de- letion of booths chairman. Interviews will take place next Tuesday and Wednesday, Feiwell continued. "Because the 1960 J-Hop was the first in three years to show a profit, next year's dance will also be held on registration weekend," he said. I The first poem which attracted widespread attention to Hughes' works was "The Weary Blues," which received the Opportunity Poetry Prize in the early 1920's and served as the title of his first book. Since that time, influenced by the rhythms of blues and jazz music, he has published a volume of poems, "Montage of a Dream," in which he has attempted to cap- ture something of the broken rhythms and jive spirit, as well as the troubled undertone, of be- bop and 'cool' music. Jazz Accompaniment Accompanying Hughes will. be Tony Scott and his Quartet. Scott, a world famous Jazz clarinetist, is the winner of the Downbeat Met- ronome Award and the Interna- tional Jazz Critics Award. Shuns Specific Form. As a performer dedicated to his playing, he emphasizes the feeling that "blowing is the thing, not playing In accord with a par- ticular school or manner." Last year, Scott and his group s p e n t e i g h t months touring Europe, Scandinavia, and finally South Africa, where they put on that country's first interracial concert, in a rented Indian temple. All seats for the concert are re- served,, and tickets may be pur- chased at many of the bookstores and music' shops in Ann Arbor. Bring Results Daily Classifieds CONSPIRATORS--Volpone and minds to work out a very profi "Volpone." The production will continue through Saturday at t Speech Depar To ProduceJ By JUDY DONER Theatre-goers who attend the speech department's Playbill pro- duction of "Volpone" will be read- ily shown that miserliness and' daring, greed and intelligence are dangerous characteristics for men to possess in combination. Ben Jonson's widely-known com- edy of humors, to be presented at 8 p.m. Thursday through Satur- day in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, amasses these traits in the characters of Volpone the Fox, and Mosca, the Fly. Obsessed with the idea of wealth although already a rich man, Vol- pone makes a pretense of illness, enticing men to deluge him with gifts in the hopes, of profiting at his death. Parasite Aids Volpone He is aided by Mosca, his para- site, a knave even less scrupulous than his emplpyer, who would make a master politician in any era. Mosca persuades each would- be heir to display his utter de- pravity: one to disinherithis own son, another to prostitute his wife to Volpone and a .last to plead guilty against his known nno- cence. Often considered as Jonson's greatest play, "Volpone" presents not only the particular greed of the characters, but also the picture of what happens when great ra- tional powers are left untouched by moral and social obligations. Although Jonson usually con- tented himself with the exposure of fools, he reveals and castigates the universal knavery of mankind in, "Volpone." Union, Others Sponsor Joint Arts Festival The Union, together with vari- ous departments of the University, will sponsor a campus-wide Crea- tive Arts Festival beginning Sun- day and continuing through Ap- ril 19. The purpose of the festival is to introduce the various facets of the fine arts to the students of the University. The University groups participating in the event are the speech, English, women's physical education and the fine arts departments. The music and architecture schools are also par- ticipating. Mapy of the departments will present special programs through- out the week including two one- act plays by the speech depart- ment, a woodwind quintet con- cert, a Persian art exhibit and a choir recital. A highlight of the festival will be an exhibit of working models of Leonardo da Vinci. The dis- play comes from the Internation- al Business Machines Corporation and many of the models are four to five feet tall. This exhibit will be housed in Clements Library. Experimental automobiles in- cluding General Motors Corpora- tions' Le Sabre and Firebird, a turbine car, and Ford's X-1000 will be on display on the - front steps of the Union throughout the week. --Daily-Robert Kaplan Mosca combine their scheming table operation in Ben Jonson's open at 8 p.m. Thursday and the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 't~'ent Pan lonson. Play Directed by Prof. Hugh Norton, of the speech department, the play will present Donald Ewing, Grad., in the mercenary, villianous title role, while Albert Phillips, Grad., will be seen as his able accamplice. Associate director for the pro- duction is Prof. G. B. Harrison of the English department. Brooke Sanders, Grad., is associate stu- dent director. "Volpone" tickets are available from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays at the theatre box office. Two University scientists re- ceived $1,000 awards at the 135th meeting of the American Chemi- cal Society (ACS) in Boston yes- terday. One of the recipients, Prof. Floyd E. Bartell of the chemical engineering department also re- ceived a certificate for his half- century membership in the ACS. He was also honored by having a symposium on chemical wetting processes given in his name. Prof. Bartell was named win- ner of the Kendall Compapy Award in Colloid Chemistry for his studies of particles, fibers and films of minute dimension. Prof. Minor J. Coon of the medical school also received an award from the Paul-Lewis Lab- oratories for his work on enzymes, which control the speed of chemi- cal processes such as digestion and respiration. Prof. Bartell's Kendall Award includes a certificate and Prof. Coon's a Paul-Lewis Award gold medal Prof. Coon, has identified, iso- lated and purified several enzymes of importance in nutrition. He was largely responsible for the discovery that animal tissues con- tain two different enzymes neces- sary for the biological utilization of carbon dioxide. Prof. Bartell, teacher of one of the first colloid chemistry courses in the United States, was largely responsible for the first National Colloid Symposium which con- tinues annually under the ACS. A special symposium will be held in his honor all day tomor- row and Friday morning. It will be attended by 10 scientists who took their doctor of philosophy degrees under Prof. Bartell over the years and his son, a professor at Iowa State. A ACS Cites University Scientists Library Usage Subject Of Mental Heatlth Survey t'A Come to Conference room 2 at the League (opposite cafeteria) Thursday & Friday 4:00-5:30 for coffee and talk with L. F. Edmunds-about the Student Summer Conference on Unifying Imnpulses in Art Science and Life Originating with Goethe and R. Steiner (1861-1925) *Spring Valley, N.Y. June 13-July 4, 1959 By PHILIP SHERMAN The Mental Health Research Institute will conduct a survey in the Undergraduate Library Wednesday, though it is not ques- tioning the sanity of its users. Rather, the survey is' intended to obtain data on the behavior of message handling organizations at high rates of usage. The Un- dergraduate Library falls into this type classification, since it handles several hundred thousand messages a, year in its ordinary operations, Richard L. Meier, re- search associate in the institute said. A survey questionnaire will be distributed to every tenth student. entering the Library. Its purpose is to determine the nature of the user-load in the Library.: Measure Efficiency 'Once the nature of usage is es- tablished, Dr. Meier said, the. ef- ficiency of the Library organiza- tion may be measured. This will be done by timing selected groups' of students as they perform vari- ous tasks, such as getting books and doing reference work., Lower times in fulfilling the as- signments, he commented, would indicate higher efficiency. In ad- dition to measuring times, the re-, sults of the tasks of the students woudl be considered. The more books assigned k that were lob- tained, for instance, the higher would be the level of efficiency. Dr. Meier asserted that efficien-. cy would increase up to 'the point where the full capacity of the Li- brary organization was reached and would then drop off. Computers Fail The survey, he 'revealed, was originally envisioned as being .car- ried out in an industrial firm with a computer. It was discovered, however, that the operations of firms considered were still not or- derly enough to permit a scienti- fic survey Dr. Meier said that little re- Poet Reads, Own Poems Poet E. G. Burrows will read from his own selections at 7 p.m. tonight in the Benzinger library, East Quadrangle. Burrows has published a book of his 'poems, "The Arctic Tern," and publishes _in Evergreen Re- view. search had been done on the be- havibr of organizations under the stress of high speed message handling and the survey was in- tended to obtain measurements on the matter. One of the conclusions of the survey and "guinea pig" experi- ments may include discovery of the capacity of the Library in statistical units. Dr. Meier termed this "an analysis of a social insti- tution in terms of benefits and costs, for members and users." On a larger scale, it will deter- mine what happens when a so-. cial institution is pushed to or beyond its full capacity, Dr. Meier said. Results obtained are expected to ameliorate the Undergraduate Library's service to users. This will be accomplished by showing new "tactics" for use in handling capacity loads, as those just be- fore exam time, and also showing specific points 'of slowdown which may be eliminated. The survey includes questions as to the user's purpose in coming to the Library, the facilities he used, the books he employed and other general information. 'Organization Notim Congregational-Disciples Guild, Cof- fee Break - 4:30-6 p.m., Graduate Group - Speaker, Dr. Robt. Moore, U. of M. Psychiatrist - 8 p.m., April 7, Guili House. Gilbert & Sullivan Soc.. Meeting of Board of Officers,; April 8, 7:15 p.m.,. SAB, Rm. 3516. * * * Graduate Student Coffee Hour, April 8, 4-5:30 p.m., Rackham Bldg., '2nd Floor-W. Lounge. All graduate stu- dents invited. * * , Initernational Folk Dancers, Israeli Dance Institute: Workshop 2-S p.m., Dance Party 8-12 p.m. Zafra Tatcher, teacher, April 11, Barbour Gym. SO Public Relations Comm., Meet- ing, April 7, 4 p.m., SAB, Rm. 1548. New members welcome or call Ron Bassey, chairman, NO 3-3307. AIEE-IRE, Election of next year's officers, April 7, 7:30 p.m., Union. Speaker: Prof. Ford, "Symmetry in Na- ture."' DIAL NO 2-3136 ENDING TONIGHT * RICHARD WI DMARK IN "THE TRAP" 1 I-! 'U Graduate Students Receiving Degrees ORDER GRADUATION A XT1TbT1VWT(T'E X T I 3:e :+:+:-:+:a 2 ym:=.y .'*:-:*M*A ..- f~Y.M-~ .9 "I