FRIDAY, JULY 26,1960" THE MICHIGAN DAILY ..._. JLY2,193T, I HI~ N AJ To Open New Concordia College MILITARY CONFLICT: U.S. Planners Weigh New Power Blocs By ERIC KELLER tip ! The Ann Arbor area will have its first junior college this fall. Located on a site between Ged- des Rd. and the Huron River, Con- cordia Lutheran College will open its doors this fall to 250 new stu- dents. The students will receive two years of a liberal arts educa- tion to prepare them for careers either as teachers or as ministers in the Lutheran Church. L. J. Garnow, business manager r of the new college, explained that the college will be the 17th liberal arts school of its type built by the Missouri Synod of the Luth- eran, Church. College Needed The synod had needed a college in this area, he said. The college will nmainly enroll students from Michigan, Indiana and Ohio, but many students outside the region will also be accommodated. Although only 250 students will enroll the first year, the college will-admit 450 students the follow- ing year. Garnow said that this is the maximum number which the college can accommodate in its present buildings. However, plans exist to extend the facilities if necessary.s Eight main buildings as well as dormitories and staff housing are being constructed. The total cost of the project is six million dollars. Modern Buildings The campus is characterized by a triangular chapel in its center. Kurath Notes Voe Sound By DANIEL BLUMENTHAL A large number of Middle Eng- lish long vowels, short vowels, and diphthongs have been combined to make up a comparatively small number of modern English "free vowels" and "check vowels," Prof. Emeritus Hans Kurath of the Eng- lish department asserted recently. Presenting "A New Lork at the History of the English Vowel Sys- tm"Prof. Kurath said that Mid- dle English short vowel sounds have been recombined to form modern "checked vowel" sounds as in the words "sit," "set," and "cat,"- while the descendants of Middle English long vowels and diphthongs are found in modern "free vowel" sounds in words such as "lie," "read," and "do." Old Pattern Most of the evolution of these sounds, he said, took place be- tween 1400 and 1600. Thus by Elizabethan times, poets were rhyming words such as "mirth' and "earth," and "claim" and "frame," although these rhymes could not have been formed with Middle English pronunciation. Some vowel changes took place in post-Elizabethan times, Prof. Kurath declared. Thus Shakes- peare's rhyme of "play" and "sea" was acceptable in the bard's day. The American colonies contrib- uted a few new sounds, such as the "a" sound in "far," although these were derived from English folk speech, he said. Triangle, Rectangle Prof. Kurath said Middle Eng- lish had a "triangular system" of five short vowels. By Elizabethan times, these had become a "rec- tangular system" of six sounds, and appear today as six "checked" vowel sounds. The number of Mid- dle English long vowels and diph- thongs, however, were greatly re- duced by "mergers" of sounds by Elizabethan times, he said. Only two Middle English diph- thongs-"au" and "oi"-have sur- vived to modern times, Prof. Kur- ath asserted. But in some areas of the United States, he noted, a few words such 'as the southeastern out" still retain the Middle Eng- lish pronunciation. DIAL 2-6641 Seven other modern buildings are grouped around the chapel. The li- brary, housing 35,000 books, is sit- uated in front of the chapel. It is connected by a roofed walk with the administration building, which will be occupied starting today. The facilities include buildings for science, fine arts, classrooms, a cafeteria and a gymnasium. I. Housing Units The dormitories and the staff housing units lie off the main campus. The women's dormitories lie west of thecampus. in the midst of groups of trees. The men's dor- mitories are on the other side of the campus. They are grouped in- to units of four houses. By the fall there will be four units for women and eight for men. Space remains for additional dor- mitories. Housing is free for the college staff. On the north side of Geddes Rd., fifteen houses will be ready by the beginning of the fall semes- ter. The college staff this fall will consist of 23 academicians. May Transfer Students graduating from Con- cordia Junior College may trans- fer to Concordia Senior College in Fort Wayne, Ind., if they plan to become ministers. Those who in- tend to go into the teaching pro- fession may transfer to the Con- cordia' Teachers College in either Seward, Neb., or River Forest, Ill. There are several other colleges available for transfer from the juniorcollege. Students planning to enter the college are advised by college au- thorities to take Latin and Ger- man in high, school since these languages are an important part of the college's curriculum. Social studies and English will also be stressed along with pre-theological studies at Concordia. Tuition for a year at the college is $470. Students who do not carry a full class load pay $10 per term hour. The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod supports to a' substantial degree those students who plan to enter the 'services of the synod. The education fee for these stu- dents is halved.4 By ELTON C. FAY Associated Press Military Affairs Reporter WASHINGTON-United States strategic planners began weigh- ing the possibility of a world pow- er realignment long before the current angry Soviet-Chinese dis- pute and Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's talk about a non- aggression agreement with the West. But the fact that this possibility has been considered for more than a decade and almost certainly is being looked at today has not changed the professional military man's belief that the major armed menace to this country continues to be the Soviet Union. The potentials of the discus- sions in Moscow still are too nebu- lous to warrant any recasting now of American military strategy. Contingency Plans On the other hand, -the Joint Chiefs of Staff maintain a folio, constantly revised, of contingency -Daily-Eric Keller BODY AND SOUL-A modernistic cafeteria and chapel will serve the varied needs of Concordia College students. The Missouri Synod Lutheran Church institution will open next month to pro- vide junior college education for 250 students. LESS THAN PAST: Steel Peace Triggers Layoffs Associated Press News Analyst PITTSBURGH - As expected, the steel labor contract signed last month has triggered a sharp cut- back in steel production and ac- celerated layoffs, but the situa- tion does not appear as serious as originally feared. Steel output has steadily plum- meted from a 38-month peak in production of 85 per cent of capa- city in May to about 63 per cent capacity as of July 6. The downhill dive is expected to continue until leveling off around 55 per cent. At least seven firms have an- nounced plans to close furnaces, furloughing more than 2500 work- ers. United States Steel Corp., bell- weather of the industry, will lay- off 1000 alone in the Pittsburgh area. High Consumption But optimism exists because of a high consumption rate. Many consumers who had stock- up earlier in the year as a hedge against a strike that never ma- terialized are using their inven- toriesf aster than anticipated. Can- cellation of new orders has not been as heavy as expected. This is especially true in the auto industry where sales are up nearly 10 per cent over last year. Model changeover has slowed the demands but by clearing out their inventories, the automakers will have to place new orders. Liquidating Stockpiles Other major steel consumers also are liquidating their stock- piles at a high rate. Many small customers did no heavy stock- piling since the threat of a strike prior to the contract settlement was not considered serious. In addition, there are always production lags at this time of the year due to customer vaca- tions. But there is nowhere near the slump that occurred last year when production plunged to nearly 40 per cent capacity after the 1962 contract settlement r High Production Because production was so high earlier this year-60 million ingot tons in the first six months-most observers have forecast the high- est annual ingot production in six years. Steel Magazine says steelmakers need to operate at only 55 per cent capacity over the last six months of the year to reach a figure of 103 million ingot tons- an increase ofealmost four million ingot tons over last year. Plant shutdowns and layoffs continue, Shut Down Works United States Steel is closing eleven open hearthsband one blast furnace at its nearby Homestead and Edgar Thompson works, idling 1000 men. Bethlehem Steel Corp., the sec-, and biggest producer, has an-, nounced plans to close six furnaces (five open hearth) at Lackawanna,, NY, throwing an undetermined number of men out of work. Jones & Laughlin Corp. has furloughed 250 men and Pitts- burgh Steel Co., a speciality pro-, ducer, plans to layoff 750-1000- or 10 per cent of its work force- by October. Professor Cites ' Post-Christian Education Role' By MARILYN KORAL "We live in a post-Christian world, and education as the only moralizing force today must get our children to make patterns, to experience closure in artistic terms," Prof. W. H. G. Armytage of the University of Sheffield at Sheffield, England, said here re- cently. Speaking on "The Arts and Sci- ences in Education," Prof. Army- tage saw an intimate association between education and "the great- est unsolved dichotomy in mod- ern society": How can one ac- knowledge an increasingly mech- anistic culture yet still retain goals which are the product of free will? The Western artistic response to an era where science is taking prominence is one of "escape," Prof. Armytage said. "They hope to resolve the frustration result- ing from the sciences becoming in- struments for programming of hu- man beings through retreating into a religious view of the world." Prof. Armytage claimed that "the abler literati, critics such as Edmund Wilson and T. S. Eliot are not talking about the arts at all. They are talking about theology." The artist, however, should be '"the eternal dissident." The artist must create alternatives to scient- ism, he continued. For the Western artist, attempt- ed retreat into religious mysticism "is not adequate" because "the West has no religion. The only country in the world today which has a religion is the Soviet Union, and the Soviet Union is the last Christian nation in the world. The Christian father is Marx," Prof Armytage said. war plans. It is patterned to esti- mates of what changes might ori conceivably could occur in inter-, national situations, with accom- panying combinations of powers.i Russia and her relationship with present or erstwhile allies as wellE as the free world is a prime factor1 in the JCS "program for planning" folio The program is divided into three strategic plans-long-range, medium-range and short-range. Each is reviewed and changed an- nually... Coordinate Planning The plans, of course, also are patterned to national military ob- jectives as established by the Pres- ident and the National Security Council. The military planning is, coordinated with political, psy- chological and economic factors. The joint chiefs therefore keep, close liaison with the State De- partment and other agencies in an effort to make the military plans as realistic as possible. The first of the three plans-the "Joint Long-Range Strategic Esti- mate"-covers a four-year period, beginning eight years after a re- vision of the previous plan. This means that the estimate is pro- jected 12 years into the future. The mid-range strategic area is covered in the "Joint Strategic Ob- jectives Plan." The JCS dictionary says this plan "translates United To Pressure Ott N-Tests Signing of a nuclear test-ban treaty would bring enormous dip- lomatic pressure on France to stop its own testing, the Christian Sci- ence Monitor said recently. This pressure would be aimed at persuading F r e n c h President Charles de Gaulle to join the United States, the Soviet Union, and Great Britain in foregoing further atomic tests in outer space, the atmosphere, and under water. In effect, this would be asking General de Gaulle to give up the cherished project on which his foreign policy is based-the ac- quisition of an independent French nuclear force. Back Seat To the French president this would mean taking a permanent back seat among the first class powers, and there is every prece- dent for concluding that he would refuse to agree. The French government has held consistently that a test-ban treaty, to be effective, must be linked to world-wide agreement to disarm. Suh an agreement would reduce the United States and the Soviet Union to rough parity with France. A partial test-ban treaty by it- self, the French insist, would leave the three nuclear powers just where they are-possessing a suf- ficient stockpile to protect them- selves-while penalizing a late- comer like France. Fallacious Atmosphere It would create a fallacious at- mosphere of detent, according to the French government, while add- ing nothing to the world's security. This view is not unique with President de Gaulle, but was gen- erally expressed by the premiers of the Fourth Republic who pre- ceded him, with the exception of Pierre Mendes-France. The result of French adherence to a nuclear test ban would be to force continued French depend- ence on the United States for nu- clear protection, a condition which President de Gaulle has explicitly rejected. Long-standing French refusal to participate in the Geneva disarm- ament talks is a harbinger of the probable French government atti- tude, should a test-ban treaty be achieved in Moscow. French officials, however, admit the extremely difficult diplomatic position in which continued test- ing would place them. Begin Ticket Sales For Music Series Season tickets are now on sale for the University Musical Socie- ty's choral union series, extra se- ries and chamber arts series. Tick- ets may be purchased at the of- fices of the Universiay Musical : Society in Burton Tower. By MALCOLM W. BROWNE Associated Press News Analyst SAIGON -- Buddhists in South Viet Nam are willing to commit ritual suicide, go to jail, face police beatings and storm barbed wire barricades to enforce their demands on the government head- ed by Roman Catholic President Ngo Dinh Diem. Why are Buddhists in South Viet Nam willing to do such things, and what do they hope to gain from it all? In hundreds of thousands of mimeographed words, Buddhist leaders have detailed some of their demands in the past two months. Fly Flags They want freedom to fly their five-colored, patchwork f l a g s whenever and wherever' they choose. They want legal reforms under which Buddhists pagodas can buy and hold real estate as freely as Christian churches. They want to be able to meet freely without special police licenses. They also want to be able to demonstrate freely in support of these and many other demands. Some of the demands are vague and expressed in obscure ways. United States officials are not at all sure just what the Buddhists do want of this Communist- threatened government. Buddhist Struggle The slogan of the Buddhists is "religious freedom and social jus- tice," but this is not a complete explanation either. One Buddhist leader, who has traveled abroad, expressed it this, way: "It is not so much a ques- tion of what we want as it is of what we don't want. "Many of us are North Viet- namese refugees. We escaped from the north in 1954 because we knew what Communist persecution does to religion-including Buddhism. "But we do not want a police state anywhere: We do not want terror or discrimination or state control. We are local Vietnamese, but this government treats us as if we were political rebels or Viet Cong. 'Ready for Sacrifice' "The world has seen what the police are willing to do to us. We are ready to sacrifice ourselves and die to end this in Viet Nam ands bring freedom to all the people:" None of the leading priests or Buddhist laymen has said he favors the overthrow of the Ngo Dinh Diem government. But as passions mount and police crack down harder, the Vietnamese "Buddhist problem" become in- creasingly a political matter. States national objectives and pol- icies for the time frame 5 to 8 years in the future into terms of military objectives and strategic concepts and defines basic under- takings for cold, limited, and gen- eral war which may be accom- plished with the objective force levels." (This means the size and weapon equipment of the Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force.) Short Plan The JCS short-range plan em- braces a period of one year and therefore is a "fighting plan" to be used in event of a war tomor- row morning. Although a non - aggression agreement is not a document for mutualmilitary support it can pro- vide indirect benefits for a partici- pant. A non-aggression pact with the West could leave Russia with more confidence in preparing for any -Daily-Eric Keller DORMITORIES-Concordia College students will be housed on the Geddes Rd. campus of the new Junior college in modernistic dormitories. The institution will offer a liberal arts education or pre- ministerial training. The junior college is affiliated with several senior colleges run by the Missouri Synod-Lutheran Church in other states. :tS 'S{ 4:": 4 r:44 '' . s.".. . .4.r4V"".t,.. sYDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN y "x "xysigx 4".4+r.gin L4sss m asgmam a ta xaa mamm gsiis s -. .,st:.o:..:v . . ....-... 'V::.. Sv4 mv.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S". . . ...,}.............{l.4A . . . . . ."44 5i.fll<-.L.. . Shows at 1:00-2:55 5:00-7:05 and 9:15 Eves. and Sunday......$1.00 Weekday Matinees .....75c Children under 12. ......50c / presents The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. FRIDAY, JULY 26 Day Calendar 9:00 a.m. -School of Public Health Institute on Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases-School of Public Health. 2:00 p.m. - Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"High Arctic Bi- ome," "Balance in Nature," and "Se- crets of the Bee World": Multipurpose Room, Undergrad Lib. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-Cinema Guild - James Stewart, March Connelly, and Murray Hamilton in "The Spirit of St. Louis": Architecture Aud. 8:30 p.m.--Dept. of Astronomy Visi- tors' Night--Prof. William P. Bidelman; Dept. of Astronomy, "Seeing Double": 5006 Angell Hall. Astronomical Colloquium: Today, 4:00 p.m., Room 807, Physics-Astronomy Bldg. Dr. Helen Dodson-Prince, Mc- Math-Hurlbert Observatory, will speak on "How Many Flares?" Doctoral Examination for Charles Michael Lanphier, Social Psychology; thesis: "Political Orientation in Work- Group Cliques," today, at 1:30 p.m., 5609 Haven Hall. Chairman, P. E. Converse. Doctoral Examination for Melvyn Joel Feinberg, Chemistry; thesis; "The Dilute Triangle-Well Fluid," today, 3003 Chem- istry Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, A. G. DeRocco. General Notices Aug. Teacher's Certificate Candidates: All requirements for the teacher's cer- tificate must be completed by Aug. 2. These requirements include the teach- er's oath, the health statement, and the Bureau of Appointments material. The oath should be taken as soon as possible in Room1203 Univ. High School. The office is open from 8-12 and 1-5. A Breakfast honoring candidates for the master's degree, will be held at the Michigan Union on Sun., Aug. 4, at 9 a.m. Candidates may pick up their tickets in Room 3510 Admin. Bldg. be- tween the hours 8-12 and 1-5 Monday through Friday, or 8-12 on Sat., July 27. Placement TEACHER PLACEMENT: TUES., JULY 30- Trust Territory, Marshall Islands - Education Specialists, Secondary Teach- ers. WED., JULY 31- Ortonville, Mich.-Early Elementary. * * * For additional information and ap- pointments contact the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB, 663-1511, Ext. 3547. POSITION OPENINGS: National Society for Crippled Children & Adults, Chicago, Ill.-The following openings are available with Easter Seal Societies & other agencies engaged in the care & rehabilitation of crippled children & adults throughout the U.S. Positions are available in these areas: Executive-Administrative; Occupational Therapy; Physical Therapy; Psych.; Re- hab. & Vocational Counseling; Social Service; Special Education; & Speech Therapy. U.S. Army, Biological Laboratories, Fort Detrick, Frederick, Md.-Many & various openings innluding: Research Mathematician; Res. Chemist; Mech. Engnr.; Aerospace Engnr.; Chem. En- gnr.; Microbiologist; Research Entomol- ogist (medical). 0 4 Master Barbers 0 Air-Conditioned 4 During the month of July the fol- For further information, please call lowing schools will be at the Bureau to General Div., Bureau of Appointments, interview candidates: 3200 SAB,.Ext. 3544. TODAY DIAL through 8-6416 Saturday e.1- 2 AWARD WINNING MOTION PICTURES THAT SHOCKED AND THRILLED AUDIENCES COAST TO COAST...! Winner of 2 Academy Awards-pls 15 international Awards of "6 2AaeA R;{iM j-y mall W VIEUX CARRE I I I I , . . .... .. . .