THURSDAY, JULY B, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VAVI PITMV TH U R D A Y, JUL 9, 964 ,i rA ltjt* 1'AL At .I IK i 'U' Gets Health Research Grant Educators Receive Grant to Continue Soviet School Study DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN -------------- a The University has received a* grant of $180,000 from the Chil- dren's Bureau of the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare to launch a long-term research program in the areas of maternal and child health, and crippled children services. The program will be directed by Prof. Donald C. Smith, chairman of the department of health de- velopment in the public health school. HEW is expected to fur- nish continuing support for the program over a number of years, Prof. Smith said. The award to the University is one of the first major grants made by the Children's Bureau. Regional Center Prof. Myron E. Wegman, dean of the public health school, said the long-term aid will enable the University to "establish a region- al center of research competence whose mission will include trans- lation of research results into tan- gible health services for mothers and children." Some of our areas to be ex- - plored, the dean said, will be the medical and social problems of handicapped children; an assess- ment of existing programs and services for these children; a re- examination of the natural his- tory of chronic diseases of child- hood; and studies of the financial aspects and institutional care pro- grams for children. Active Roles Official health agencies, private i physicians, hospitals and clinics inl a five-state Midwestern area are expected to play active roles in the research program.c The University was chosen be- I cause of its medical and public health resources, and because of its existing close relationships with f official health agencies in thec Midwest. Prof. Smith pointed outs that "a significant part of thet program will entail close working arrangements with these agen-k cies." PROF. MYRON E. WEGMAN, dean of the public health school, and Prof. Donald C. Smith, head of the school's department of health development, will' participate in a research program fi- nanced by the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare. APPLIED SCIENCE Youtz- Views Art, Architecture As Linked, N ot Antagonistic Across Campus The Audio Visual Education Center will present a film preview featuring "John Fitzgerald Ken- nedy" and "Quest for Freedom" in the Multipurpose Rm. of the UGLI at 1:30 p.m. American Negro ... The Summer Session Special Program "The American Negro in Transition-1964" will present Prof. Hale A. Woodruff of New York University speaking on "The Role of the Negro Artist in Amer- ica Today" in Aud. B at 4:10 p.m. Criteria . .. The Department of Linguistics Forum Lecture will feature Guy Cappelle, of the Bureau d'Etudes et de Liaison, Paris, speaking on Linguistic Criteria for the Selec- tion of Items in Foreign Language Teaching" in Rackham Amphi- theater at 7:30 p.m. CORE Meeting . . . A specially called general mem- bership meeting of Ann Arbor CORE will be held at the Ann Arbor Community Center, 625 N. Main St., at 8 p.m. The meeting is being called to determine CORE's position on school inte- gration proposals recommended by the special study committee of the Ann Arbor Board of Education. Williams .. . The University Players will pre- sent Tennessee William's "Summer and Smoke" in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre at 8 p.m. tl tl a B tI a t7 p Cl a it Students in the college of arch- tecture and design are discover- ing that art and science are no onger antagonists but different ways of dealing with our physi- cal and cultural environments, Dean Philip N. Youtz said recently. "Until very recently most artists feared science and believed it was destructive of aesthetic values," stated the dean, who began re- tirement furlough July 1. "But in the last few years the faculty and students of the col- lege have come to accept a new philosophy," he added. "Applied science plays an in- creasing role in the education of the architect. Students are electing courses in psychology, in the chemistry of color, in the met- allurgical techniques of casting. Basic courses in landscape archi- tecture deal with soil mechanics and horticulture. The design pro- fessions today are depending on knowledge as well as on intui- tion for their practice." Dean Youtz stated' that the em- phasis on scientific thinking has greatly stimulated the students. "They are enthusiastic about the new plastics, the modern com- ponents and the novel systems of construction. Never having been acquainted, with the old crafts they have no difficulty in accept- ing the factory niade products. When the Producers Council puts on an exhibit, the students crowd around the booths to discover the latest materials on the market. "They are interested in the mechanical equipment that is transforming buildings into auto- matically controlled machines for comfortable living," he said. "The modern generation does not wor- ry over the possibility that fac- tory production will destroy the architectural profession. Students are confident they can design for machine production even more successfully than their predeces- sors did for handcraft items." Anth ropoli gists Studying Sites By The Associated Press Two ancient Indian sites near Grand Rapids and Saginaw are being excavated this summer by University anthropologists. Work is being supported by the National Science Foundation. The Grand Rapids site, said Prof. James Griffin, anthropology museum director, is "one of the best Hopewell burial mound groups in the country." Indians of the Hopewell culture are thought to have moved into southern and western Michigan from Illinois about the time of the birth of Christ. They are be- lieved the first of the agricultural Indians to invade the territory. The Saginaw site was describ- ed by Prof. Griffin as one of multiple occupancy, with relics of early woodland Indians at lower levels followed by those of the Hopewell culture. They.earliest oc- cupancy is estimated at dating back to about 500 years before the birth of Christ. A grant of approximately $45,- 000 has been awarded to three faculty members of the education school by the United States Of- fice of Health, Education and Welfare. Profs. William K. Medlin, Wil- liam M. Cave and Finley Carpen- ter will use the grant to continue research study on "the relation- ship between socio-economic de- velopment and educational re- quirements in a technically un- derdeveloped society: Soviet Uzbe- kistan." The faculty members return in May from the Soviet Republic of Uzbekistan, which adjoins Afghan- istan, having spent around six weeks studying the historical, so- ciological and psychological there. More Research * The new grant will make possi- ble additional research to show how the general economic devel- opment of the area relates to the preparation of youth to serve in the changing socio-economic or- der. This phase will be concluded next summer. "We found motivation among young Uzbeks to achieve was high," Prof. Cave reported. "Those Uzbeks who chose to accept So- viet values, notwithstanding the authoritarian order, have risen to positions of leadership in the So- viet republic. The schools have been instrumental in providing the native population with the skills necessary for social mobility." Culturally Rooted Prof. Cave said most Uzbeks fa- vor Western dress habits and cus- toms although some more cultural- ly-rooted urbanites seem to be re- sisting these changes. He said they found the traditional role of Is- lam in the Uzbek society is dim- inishing in importance. Prof. Cave said the Soviet school has emerged as the primary agen- cy for inducting the young into the Soviet social order. "The boarding schools are particularly effective social systems inasmuch as they maintain an extended per- iod of control over the children." He noted that a significant per- centage of the native women now work and have thus gained a measure of economic independ- ence. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St. At Hillel, Wed., July 15, 7 p.m., Prof. Samuel J. Eldersveld, chairman of the Department of Political Science, speaks on "Impressions of India." All welcome. NAGILA DANCERS Open Session Tonight 1:30 P.M. HILLEL 1429 Hill ALL WELCOME . .iti i:":?:":': ti?':.ti :'. ":1V .y V }1 v . :.t:V,\ ':1t: . :':tit. ':'ti : .+.^ . 1tV. . .1v V: :' y '.'h 1. 5. . . 1 s' "4r 1 PROF. FINLEY CARPENTER To Hold -Talks On Diseases Between 800 and 1000 persons are expected to attend a 2-day conference on "Some Basic As- pects of Cancer" at Rackham Lec- ture Hall Saturday and Sunday. All physicians in the Washte- naw area have been invited to attend this Sixth Annual Merck Sharp & Dohme Conference. Phy- sicians attending the meeting will hear 10 guest participants. Co-sponsoring the conference with the Department of Postgrad- uate Medicine are the Michigan State Medical Society, the Wayne State University School of Medi- cine, the Michigan Department of Health, and the Thomas Henry Simpson Institute for Medical Re- search. E xYE t . ce Admission Test for Graduate Study Sin Business: Candidates taking the Ad- Manufacturina Workshop-Registra- mission Test for Graduate Study in tion, Michigan Union Ballroom, 8 a.m. Business on Sat., July 11, are request- ed to report to Room 130 Business Ad- ministration Bldg. at 8:45 Saturday Audio-Visual Education Center Film morning, Preview-"John Fitzgerald Kennedy" and "Quest for Freedom": Multipur- Graduate Record Examination: Can- pose Room, Undergrad Library, 1:30 p.m. didates taking the Graduate Record Examination on Sat., July 11, are re- quested to report to Aud. B, Angell Summer Session Special Program - Hall at 8:45 Saturday morning. "ThIe American Negro in Transition: _____ 1964'-Male A. Woodruff, Professor of Art Education. New York University, "The Role of the Negro Artist in Amer- Pla cement ica. Today": Aud. B, Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Reception for Prof. Woodruff after the lecture, South Gallery, Museum ofANNOUNCEMENT: Art. D - fn r - n or rs .rra xw . I r .f ; ¢,r .) I I f v Dept. of Linguistics Forum Lecture-' Guy Capelle, Bureal d'Etudes et de+ Liaison, Paris, "Linguistic Criteria for the Selection of Items in Foreign Language Teaching": Rackham Amphi- theatre, 7:30 p.m.+ University Players, Dept. of Speech Production-Tennessee williams' "Sum- mer and Smoke": Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. F.S.T. Special Summer Lectures - Dr. Ian M. Mills of the University of Reading, England, will speak on Theory of Molecular Force Fields and Molecular Dynamics"-Lecture Four to be given on July 9 at 1 p.m. in Rm. 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Mathematics Movie: Mathematical Association of America move in "Mathe- matical Induction" starring Prof. Leon Henkin, University of California. Thurs- d i, July 9, 1:30 p.m., Rm. 35, Angel Hail. 'A GAY ROMP! COMPLETELY MAD!" -N.Y. Daily News Peace Corps-Today and Friday are the last days that the Peace Corps will be on campus. They have information centers in the lower lobby of the Michigan Union and on the Diagonal. They will give the placement test at 1 p.m. on Thurs. (today) and at 9 a.m. on Friday in the Union. The regular Peace Corps exam will be given at 8'30 2 ANIMAL ADVENTURES TO DELIGHT THE YOUNG IN HEART' Share fun and excitement with an Eskimo Teenager and her > wilderness pet! The Daily Official Bulletin is an of ficial public ation of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily a ,siuts no editorial res oim bilty. Notices A hould b e, se nit in TYP1ERi7TTEN form to Room 3,i4 Administration Building before S.,of the duay preceding pubiica- tion, and by p.m. Friday for Satur- day and S"nday. T1URSDAY, JULY 9 Pei v C 1 )n(Itir " a.m. on Sat, at the Downtown Post t Not6/*(1 00CeS Office at Main & Catherine. Parking Notice: The following park- POSITION OPENINGS: lng areas will be closed for construe- Navy Dept.-Civilian job opportuni- tion purposes: !ties as follows: Contract Negotiators, Effective July 7: The South Bay of Ops. Res. Analysts at Hdqts. of Navy Staff Student Meter parking lot W-26, Dept.; Digital Computer Programmers, 400 block of Thompson Street and the Math, Ops. Res. Analysts, Personnel parking bay directly west of Jefferson Res. Specialists, Tech. Manual Writer- apartments, 500 block of East Jefferson Editor in Wash., D.C.; Accountant, Ad- Street. min. Officer, Contract Specialist, 'Posi- Effective July, additional spaces on tion Classification Specialist, Person- the east side of the Jefferson apart- nel Staffing Specialist in Maryland; ments. Mgmt. Analyst, in Va.; also various other positions & locations. " U.S. Civil Service, 7th Region--Open- ings Include: Digital Computer Sys. tems, Procurement Officer, Supv. Ad- min., Engineers, Psychiatrist, Nurses, Physicians, Chemists, Phys. Therapist, Social Worker, etc. U.S. Civil Service-Openings for As- tronomers in Navals Labs of the Po- tomac. BS degree with at least 12 hrs. of Astro. & courses in Math & Physics totaling at least 18 hrs. Study of Math must have included differential & in- tegral calculus. For higher level posi- tions, exper. Is required. For further information, please call General Div., Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544. r t' ',) ,n ......................... . k ".. ti i -r A style ' iM, champion PYe u'eC t LcYl I~ tF r YY : Coo. ::' to. v IS IRENE& I= v ', // RYEA COLOR BY DELUXE - CINEMASCOPE s: ._ Ql < b ' r , °; F t i , : F < ,< . . p - T F . a .'i. 1: