AN A vv SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT STARTS TONIGHT TONIGHT TONI( AT 7:30 DIALNO 8 .AT 7 DIALNO -6416 ; U Standards of Admission Set No Sharp 'Cutting Edge' LEONARDO 'THE MODERN': Library Exhibits DaVinct Models By PHILIP SHERMAN s Leonardo DaVinci would be very much at home in the modern world. City Records First Fatalit W1 GHT :30 THE MOSTISIGNIFICANT HUMAN DRAMA EVER LIVED! Cecil B. DeMille has recorded, for allages, the dramatic.story of Moses and the Ten Commandments, bringing to life through the medium of the motion picture screen, this inspiring theme. 5EE 'IT" WITH Yoo ENTIRE;: FAMILY ECHNICOLORO W A Paramont PUM By NAN MARKEL No sharp "cutting edge" defines the University's admissions stand- ards. Instead, the admissions office selects students on a "rolling ad- missions" plan. Of the quota set for the prospec- tive freshman class, two thirda are admitted from Michigan and one third from out of state. State residents are accepted as soon as possible if they. meet admissions criteria-for state students the question is whether or not they can carry the University program successfully. Class rank, kinds of high school courses, extracurricular activities, high school principals' recommen- dations and college board scores (although these are not required for state residents) are taken into account. Special preference is given to children of alumni. Enrollees are expected to be-at least 16 years old. Earlier applica- tions receive priority. "Admissions are tailor-made," admissions director Clyde Vroman stressed, "and they depend on the school in the University that the student applies to and how well qualified he is for that particular curriculum." For instance, a fu- ture music school student must have good scholastic standing and be talented musically. Standards Differ An applicant to the literary col- lege would not be chosen for musi- cal talent, but more "academic talent" might be required of him. Out-of-state students are exam- ined for "an aggressive interest in academics," Vroman said. Here, since out-of-state applications number half the total but fill only one third the quota, competition is greater. Policy is "selective" rather than "acceptive." These applications are processed Off ice Gives Faith Survey, Of 20,000 students polled, the second semester religious census indicates that 45 per cent are list- ed as Protestants, the. Office of Religious Affairs reported yester- day. Those giving no stated prefer- ence compose 23 per cent of the sampling, followed by Roman Catholics and Jews, each with about 13 per cent. The remaining 6 per cent in- dude members of the Eastern Orthodox and other Western 'and Eastern faiths. The religious census lists 30 preferenced groups, a no-prefer- ence category and v7 traditions with less than 15 representatives on campus. Nights and Sunday Adults $1.00 Saturday Matinee 80c Shows.Saturday and Sunday at 12:00--3:45-7:30 in three groups. Group I includes those described by the admissions leaflet as "qualified to an excep- tional degree." They are admitted as soon as their applications are complete and processed. Others 'Wait' Group Ii, better known as the waiting list, includes "those who seem qualified to carry University Some statistics on University admissions: 1) In a typical freshman class two fifths rank in the upper ten per cent of their graduating classes. Four per cent rank in the lower fifty per cent of their graduating classes. 2) Between 40 and 45 per cent of the students who apply for admissions are accepted. In 1958, three thousand were selected from '7,400. 3) Approximately half the fresh- men selected to participate in the literary college honors pro- gram are from the state, and half from out of state. These students are selected on the basis of superior ability and records. 4) With the selective admissions, only about five per cent of the freshmen fail in their first year, the national average being be- tween 20 and 30 per cent. About 80 per cent who enter as freshmen go on to complete their educational objective as compared with 50 per cent na- tionally. courses successfully." Because of limitations on out-of-state enroll- ment, these students are not noti- fied of 'acceptance or refusal until after April. More and better students have applied for admission this year, *Vroman noted. He attributed the 15 per cent rise in applications to high school seniors who are apply- ing to more schools and to growing interest in a college education. Admissions this year are furth- er complicated by two new factors introduced by the admissions of- fice "experimentally." A $50 en- rollment fee has been set, and an early registration plan put into action. These "jell" enrollment some- what faster, Vroman indicated. Organization Notices Hillel Foundation, Passover Meals, April 22-30, 1419 Hill. « * « Hillel Foundation, Sabbath Services; student conducted; Alpha Epsilon Phi, sponsors, April 17, 7:15 p.m., Zwerding- Cohn Chapel, 1419 Hill. * * s Hillel Foundation, lecture, "What Is Man" - two views: Kieregaard and Buber, Dr. N. A. Wiesner, April 19, 8 p.m., Kasle Library, 1419 Hill- Congregational and Disciples Guild, luncheon discussion, April 17, 12 noon, Guild House.' * * * Luth. Stud. Assoc., discussion of Ber- lin Crisis, April 17, 4:15 p.a., Luth. Stud. Center. As evidenced by an exhibition of models of his inventions in the Clements Library, Leonardo would not be surprised at such things as the air conditioner, parachute, air- plane and machine gun. Five hun- dred years ago, he perfected crude prototypes of these modern de- vices. Though better known today as a painter of the "Mona Lisa" and "Last Supper" Leonardo was, men- tally, a scientist. He even applied scientific principles to his art. In fact, Leonardo believed that art should be used to set down ab- stract scientific principles. His vql- uminous notebooks abound with illustrations of principles and facts he noted in observation. Invents Airplane In the scientific field, perhaps Leonardo's most famous invention is the ornithopter, or the flying machine. Designed to enable man to fly in the manner of a bird, the machine was a frame on which a man could lie, fitted with ropes and pulleys with which to operate the attached wings. In addition to this "airplane" Leonardo designed a helicopter, the propellor of which resembles a modern corkscrew. The men who were to operate the vehicle would have had no DESIGNED BY DA VINCI - T1 Library as a part of the Union-s time to use the propellor's modern day counterpart since they had to turn it by pushing a windlass like device at the base. Conceives Parachute Leonardo conceived a parachute more like those of today than his airplane and helicopter. Resembl- .ing a small four-walled tent, his design was actually tried in 1652 by a group of Dutch students using a lifesized doll. They dropped the contraption 150 feet from a church steeple, the flight lasting five seconds. bis car is on display at Clements sponsored Creative Arts Festival. Another design by Leonardo was a tank that' resembled a greatt wooden tortiseswith .guns pro- truding from every direction. Almost every one of Leonardo's important works are similar to analagous devices used in today's civilization. The entire exhibition is spon- sored by a national manufacturing firm and is currently touring the country. The models were built by Dr. Roberto Guatelli, an authority on Leonardo. It is part of the Creative Arts Festival. In Traffic Harold A. Greenwood of nearby Scio township was killed yester- day in Ann Arbor's first traffic fatality of the year. Greenwood, a 26 year old car- penter, was driving west on Jack- son Ave. on the 1900 block when the accident occurred. His car apparently lurched out of control, crossed the curb, careened 76 feet along the edge of the road and struck a tree, police reported. He was pronounced dead on ar- rival a: University Hospital at 12:30 a.m. Police said he had not been ill prior to the crash, and the car was apparently in good working order. Greenwood is survived by his wife and two children. Last year at this time 28 fatal accidents had occurred in Wash- tenaw County, compared to only six this year. The 1958 city total was three deaths. DIAL NO 2-3136 The producer of "War and Peace" presents entertainment so vast it bursts the very boundaries of the huge motion picture screen! f 1 V Successful Handling of Maladjusted Comes Through Practical Experience, Morse Says U 1 presented by the Michigan Union April 12-19 CREATIVE ARTS* FESTIVAL tivities frightens and frustrates rather than helps the bo s; In other cases the normal attentive instinct which guides children to "select gratifying play" isn't pres- ent and the boys become dreamy or restless. Aim at Understanding Both of these situations are oc- currences with which the staff must constantly deal. "Here the problem isn't merely to point out the boy's insecurity but find a means to make him comfortably into society," Prof. Morse com- mented. The goal of understanding the child and the roots of his behavior is basic to all work at the camp. For this reason the staff often negates the punitive aspect in favor of "counseling a child who has tantrums or attempts to run away.") While service is.valuable, Prof. Morse points out, the primary goal of the, camp is training.' To this end some 55 University graduates and undergraduates from a variety of fields work on the staff. Today's Special Event 3:30 P.M. Color Slide Lecture I: by Dennis Lucey of Ansco "Technique of Color Photography" Architecture Auditorium FRESH AIR CAMP--Campers here examine' one of the milder types of snake. A m 0E iAIsU~gIIS IWJI HEFUN MANGANO-UNOFOI SUNDAY The hilarious * i i CLASSICAL RECORD SALE All MGM's ................... .....$1.98, All Westminsters's .. ... . .....,... $2.98 CLOSEOUTS All Angel Thrift ....................$3.49 All WFB's.$..9.. ........8 All Bruno and Colosseum..............$2.98 (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fifth in a series of articles dealing with the Institute for Human Adjust- ment. By CHARLES KOZOLL "Successful handling of malad- justed children is skill not to be acquired through reading text books. "It comes through living and working with individual problems." According to Prof. William C. Morse of the education school this is the training precept on which the University's Fresh Air Camp is founded. Since 1946 a part of the Institute for Human Adjust- ment, it combines training and research with service to emotion- ally disturbed boys of the state. Drawing qualified graduates and undergraduates from education nursing, social work, psychology and sociology, the camp creates an atmosphere which. facilitates adjustment. Besides striving to at- tain an aura which will aid mental hygiene, the staff looks to research for establishing systems of work- ing with children. Procedures Advanced, "Today diagnostic procedures are much further advanced than treatment methods," Prof. Morse explained. "To resolve the gap between the two groups, clinicians should learn how to live with, problem children," he went op to say. Through interdepartmental co- operation, Prof. Morse pointed out, the camp is able to develop modern techniques and prove them in an actual field experience. The staff attempts to work out games or projects which will "help the boy become adjusted to reality." Frequently the competitive na- ture of common recreational ac- aM MUSIC SHOE1S "Some Like If Hof" starring MARILYN MONROE --CAMPUS- 211 S. State NO 8-9013 -DOWNTOWN- 205 . Liberty NO 2-0675 4 SPRING SPECIALS All All All All All All RCA VICTORS COLOMB IlAS CAPITOLS EVERESTS DECCAS EPICS $10 Off List (Limited time only) DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER WORKSHOP presents IONESCU CS "THE BAILD SOPRANO" Friday and Saturday, April 17, 18 at 8:30 P.M. Discussion after play tonight Lane Hall Auditorium Admission $1.00 Tickets at Bob Marshall's and the Disc Shop for the Finest in Recorded Music THE MUSIC CENTER ... 300 S. 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