WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, SULLY 25, 1962 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY snuMd Says Court Decision Voids Con-Con Plan PROVOCATIVE, RARE BOOKS: Library Exhibits Rare Books Legislators Mark Time For Appeal (Continued from Page 1) DATA-PROCESSING: 'U' Researcher Analyzes Man in Machine System (Continued from Page 1) By MARKBLUCHER In the opinion of Prof. James B. Pollock of the political science de- partment, the apportionment pro- visions in the proposed Constitu- tion would not stand up in the state Supreme Court. With the impact of the court's recent decision, the Constitutional Convention's formula for an 80 per cent population, 20 per cent area basis for districting would be invalidated by the court's criterion that no senatorial district have more than twice the population of another. He has decided to make a sug- gestion to the convention when it reconvenes Aug. 1: Stick with Plan "Leave in the present sections relating to the Senate, stipulating that if this is declared unconstitu- tional by the United States Su- preme Court, then the language, similar to that of the 1908 Con- stitution could be inserted. This would put the Senate on a base whose main consideration is popu- lation." "A great effort was made to liberalize the 1952 amendment" freezing the state's districts, Prof. Pollock continued in his lecture, the fifth in his series of talks on the Convention. These new apportionment pro- visions place Michigan among the top six states in the country that have both houses requiring 40 per cent or more of the voters to elect a majority, he said. One of the problems that Michi- PROF. JAMES B. POLLOCK ... Con-Con lecture gan, faced in the past was the un- willingness of the state Legislature to reapportion itself. The new Constitution has alleviated this with the employment of bipartisan legislative commission. "This is, I think, a distinct advance," Prof. Pollock said. The new Senate plan, taking in- to consideration both area and population, has raised the per- centage of voters able to control the body from 29 per cent to 43 per cent. This will lead to about a three and one half to one differen- tial between some of the districts, he continued. "There was not a question in the world but what some changes were necessary and the constitu- tional changes that were made were considerable," Prof. Pollock said. Con-Con Plan Void But, in view of the attitude of the court, "I'm sure the provision would be declared unconstitution- al," he said. Prof. Pollock was disappointed that the "whole discussion of ap- portionment overshadowed the whole legislative process. If any- thing needs to be rehabilitated, as far as the organs of government are concerned, it is the legislative process." of other volumes exhibited be- come somewhat older. "The Theory of the Leisure Class" by Thorstein Veblen-a scathing criticism of American so- cial life which influenced and altered the traditional patterns of American life at the turn of the century-and John Dewey's plan for modernizing elementary and secondary school education, "The School and Society," both first editions, reveal something of the tremendous forces at work which helped bring about the current academic philosophy at many in- stitutions of higher learning, in- cluding the University. It's likely that a great many of the individuals who wrote the books which are on display didn't realize just how important their work would be. Reports Wee Beasties Anton Leeuwenhoek's letters to a group of British doctors and scientists telling of the minute living things he saw beneath his ground lenses or a book by Ed- ward Jennerson the possibility of ending smallpox epidemics through cowpox vaccinations scarcely re- veals the importance of the work initiated by these men. Other books, a whole series of philosophical works, read like the index to a Carl Cohen text: A Dozen Philosophers In addition to a first-edition Hegel, printed in 1821, the collec- tion shows "Essays" by the Uto- pian socialist Robert Owen; "Com- mon Senese" by Thomas Paine (over 100,000 copies were sold within three months of its first printing in January, 1776); "Jen- seits von Gut und Bose" by Fred- erick Nietzsche; A first-edition (in French) of de Tocqueville's "Democracy in America"; "Essays" by Ralph Seldes To Lecture In Series on Youth Gilbert Seldes of the University of Pennsylvania will speak on "American Youth and the Popular Arts" at 4:10 p.m. today in Aud. A. The lecture is part of the Summer Session's continuing series on "American Youth 1962." Emerson; a first-edition "Federal- ist" papers dating from 1788; a fore-runner to the United Na- tions charter by Emanuel Kant en- titled "Eternal Peace"; "The Wealth of Nations" by Adam Smith; Hobbes' "Levia- than"; Descartes' "Discourse on Method"; and lastly a very small pamphlet called "Areopagitica, a Speech by Mr. John Milton." The exhibition contains a good many other interesting books and provides one easy way to forget the cares and worries of the Uni- versity for an hour or so. Unless such worries happen to center around philosophy or science or foreign languages. The books will be on display through the end of the summer session in mid-August. After that they will be returned either to the Rare Book Rm. or to one of the other libraries from whence they came. ly after the decision was nounced. Congress Deadlock Stymies Programs for Unemployed By SARABETH RICHMAN They will be paid $37 a week The Manpower Development Act, while in training unless they are intended to relieve long-term un- receiving a higher amount in un- employment in many of the state's employment compensation. depressed areas, especially Detroit, Projected programs for Alma,, has not yet gone into effect be- Battle Creek, Bay City and De- cause Congres's has been deadlock- troit-some of the cities involved ed on the appropriation. --include courses for nurses' aides, The retraining programs are machine assemblers, milling ma- designed for workers who lose chine operators and automobile their jobs because of automation repairmen as well as many skills and for high-school "drop-outs" useful in the automotive field and who are presently unemployed. hence useful in the Detroit area. The purpose will be to provide Signed March 15 marketable skills for the unem- The Manpower Development Act ployed who qualify for training. was signed into a bill by President It is hoped that this program John F. Kennedy on March 15. will increase the reservoir of skill- This law requires that there be a el manpower and reduce the num- reasonable chance that those re- ber of unemployed dependent on trained be able to find a job. state jobless pay or welfare, a Programs under the act result spokesman for the Michigan Em- from a cooperative effort between ployment Securities Commission the State Manpower Development indicated. Commission, the Michigan Board HEW Approval of Control for Vocational Educa- tion, The Michigan Employment In spite of the tie-up in Con- Securities Commission and the gress, however, many of the pro- Labor Department. grams have been approved by the Health, Education and Welfare _>..>:.:..:..:: Department. Gov. John B. Swainson signed A I L I last month a bill enabling the C Michigan State Board of Control to accept and expand funds for _ retraining courses. The MESC determines the need The Daily Official Bulletin is an for particular types of skills, and ficial p ication ofr which The the official said, that a need for Michigan Daily assumes no editorial the trainees exists. There is a *esponsibility. Notices should be strong probability, he said, that sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building there will be two openings for befor e24 pm..stworayns receding -i Sen. Philip Rahoi (D-Iron Mountain) said that the Senate would never be in its "mess" had it been "fair to the people." He accepted a challenge by fellow Upper Peninsula Sen. Kent Lund- gren (R-Menominee) to debate the reapportionment issue in that area of the state. Swainson, predicting that the Legislature would come up with a reapportionment plan acceptable to the state Supreme Court, said that he thought the Legislature could reapportion itself by next Friday. Probably Not While this is possible, it is highly improbable, he added. The governor said that once the Legislature decided "we were to have nuisance taxes it acted ex- peditiously" and that when law- makers decided to raise their own salaries 'they did it in five min- utes." Sen. Farrell Roberts (R-Pon- tiac) introduced a "vehicle" ap- portionment scheme eliminating one district from the Upper Pen- insula and combining Oakland and Washtenaw Counties. Ready for Anything Roberts said he does not intend for it to pass, but wanted to have an amendable bill available should the United States Supreme Court appeal fail. Under legislative procedure, a bill must be five days in its house of origin. Roberts declared his measure would avoid this delay by introducing it while the appeal was being decided. an- How does man function in a machine system which he himself has organized and instituted? What tasks within this system can be performed more efficiently by men rather than machines? Prof. Paul M. Fitts ,of the psy- chology department is engaged in intensive research to try and find some of the answers. Five Characteristics In his current study, he has developed what he calls a tax- onomy ,or working classification, of information-processing meth- ods. These five types of behavior include complete-information pro- cessing, partial-information pro- cessing, information reduction, heuristic problem solving and de- cision making. The first kind comprises trans- lation from one code to another. All the information in the stimu- lus sequence must reappear in the response sequence. Thus, a mu- sician must respond to every stim- ulus in the printed notes when he plays his instrument. Partial-information processing- the second behavioral function in filtering in man's response to Prof. Fitts' taxonomy-involves a stimuli. One good example of this sort is the proofreader, who trains himself to respond only to errors in printed copy. Condensation The third type is that of in- formation reduction or summary, in which the individual condenses the information available to him. Anyone who reads a newspaper article engages in this function if he retains only the general sense of the article. Problem solving, the fourth clas- sification, uses various sources of ULLETIN Devise Gadget To Measure Driver Action The University has helped to develop the first systematic ap-' proach to improving automobile driving training programs with anI electronic machine the size of a glove compartment. The device counts the number of actions a driver makes in oper-, ating the vehicle, including devia- tions of the steering wheel, accel- erator and brake. It also records the number of speed changes and the total time the car has its wheels in motion.' The instrument, devised by men' from the University's transporta- tion center under sponsorship of an automotive firm in Detroit, provides an objective measurement? of driver actions, in contrast to the subjective reports by driving instructors. Further research is being done on what number of driving actions constitutes the norm and wheth- er such a device can determine what constitutes a good or bad driver. pi WED. - THURS. GIGI Starring Louis Jourdan CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF Lizz Taylor, Paul Newman )FFICIAL 8 information. The processtof heur- ism means that data gathered at one step in a problem is applied to solve it or decide upon the next step. The final type is decision mak- ing, in which a course of action is selected on the basis of incom- plete information or in the face of risk. Other Areas These are the five phases of Prof. Fitts' general theory of in- formation-processing behavior. He is also studying the variables and integration of the functions, and testing the relevance of his find- ings to typical command and con- trol tasks. Feedback, or knowledge of re- sults, is a factor common to all five information-processing meth- ods. It takes many forms ranging from absence of knowledge to a complete understanding pf the problem. Another influence is the dynam- ic or static nature of the task. The more effect the individual's response has on the sequence of events, the more dynamic is the task. Team Study Keeping these two factors in mind, Prof. Fitts focused his at- tention on the spontaneous de- velopment of team relationships in a complex task combininb sev- eral information-processing ac- tivities. The main results of this study- involving several two-man teams monitoring taxicabs through com- plex patterns of mobility-reveal- ed that individuals working with all five types of data processing performed much better under high-load conditions than low- load. U i;r : xrr.} ,},r: { "rx irs : rr;r rt,:{ }, i .v; 'F ::;}:rr. a }v." rtv ,.r r : , "r.}: r}:,:}}; 't, {.yv .:yv."i: s; {: ,rry , {' Y ,..,+ : ' ; y. '.+ .,.;} rte' ;r X''.'+i'.:;^.a r. ?.v :"R.:^:%rrrfivG:tir ,:"b :i"J.'d::.4"rx r }::."Ylinv i .%}ti>'.":{rSF.r;%% +::' '.{!'r,:r.* * "}if s.ff:}}::;iv:" ?}.^:t;S4 .r:'r.":.::i".: }y:'::. i% every trainee. publication. PENTAGON'S NEW MAN: Taylor Comes Back to Joint Chiefs By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON -Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor got the second-best job of his career for looking like a yes-man. It turned out he wasn't, and he quit. Now, for not being a yes-man, he gets the best job. War or Peace This puts two strong-willed men in the Pentagon: . Taylor, whom President Ken- nedy called out of retirement last year and has just named chair- man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara. How they get along will be one of the interesting stories ahead. In early 1955, when Taylor was r LsR~~P/1r-!1 T /TRE ' YPSI-ANN MINI GOLF NOW OPEN Located Next to Ypsi-Ann Drive-In; OPENING SPECIAL Bring This Coupon and Play Miniature Golf FOR PRICE M Offer Good Anytime until Aug. 1, 1962 4,.r~v. ....w~ .,.,.n: r~s ein w~,.a, ..v.. ,:.e..:n ..f .ra.u ..i. +:..+ w ....L N.+.r... vtiw commander of the Army forces' in the Far East, he was called back to Washington without being told why. He was ushered into the office of Defense Secretary Charles Wilson. Grills Taylor In a book which he wrote later -"The Uncertain Trumpet"- Taylor said Wilson beat around the bush and finally cross-examin- ed him on his willingness to ac- cept civilian orders. Taylor said he reassured Wilson since he never had been insubor- dinate. Then President Dwight D. Eisenhower sent for him, asked him the same question, got the same answer. The result: on Junef 30, 1955, Taylor was named Army Chief of Staff and, as such, a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Four years later to the day he retired. In between times three things had happened: Pentagon Strife He had protested in vain against cutting the size of the Army; he developed the idea the Joint Chiefs of Staff as such should be abolish- ed, and he was in deep disagree- ment with the Eisenhower ad- ministration defense concept. The book he wrote a year later was about that disagreement. Briefly, it was this: He felt the administration put too much emphasis on "massive retaliation." Since the United States and Russia now had the power to flatten each other, he felt neither would voluntarily start a nuclear war. Saw Brush-Fire Action Therefore, he reasoned, what could be expected from Commun- ism was a lot of wars smaller than the all-out kind which would re- quire the biggest nuclear weapons. His point was that this country must be prepared to cope with general atomic war, limited atomic war, conventional war and guer- rilla war. And in his book he expanded on the idea that the present Joint Chiefs of Staff should' be scrapped and replaced by a single defense chief of staff and an advisory board which he called the Supreme Military Council. Congress Balks Congress has been opposed to' the idea of a single head of the military services. The heads of those services-the Joint Chiefs--I would never sit still for it. Now as chairman of the Joint Chiefs a job which puts him in close contact with McNamara-- WEDNESDAY, JULY 25 General Notices Seniors: College of L.S. & A., and Schools of Education, Music, Public Health, and Business Administration: Tentative lists of seniors for Atig. grad- uation have been posted on 'the bulle- tin board in the first floor lobby, Ad- min. Bldg. Any changes therefrom should be requested of the Recorder at Office of Registration and Records win- dow Number A, 1513 Admin. Bldg. August Teacher's Certificate Candi- dates: All requirements for the teach- er's certificate must be completedby Aug. 3rd. These requirements include the teacher's oath, the health state- ment, and the Bureau of Appointments material. The oath should be taken as soon as possible in room 1203 Univ. High Sch. The office is open from 8-12 and 1-5. Foreign Visitors Following the the foreign visitors who will be on campus this week on the dates indicated. Program arrangements are being made by the International Center: Mrs. Clif- ford R. Miller. Wolf-Heider Rein, Research Assist- ant, Dept. of Applied Math, Institute of Technology, Darmstadt, Germany, July 24-27. Sault Sipila, Foreign Editor, of Uusi- Suomi, Helsinki, Finland, July 25-28. Events Next Week: Dylan Thomas' great "Under Milk Wood," Wed. through Sat., Trueblood Aud., Frieze Bldg. Tickets available now, 10-5 daily at Trueblood box office: $1.50,.1.00 for Wed. & Thurs., $1.75, 1.25 for Fri. & Sat. Lecture: Auspices of the Department of English and the Summer Session. "Lawrence Durrell and the Tradition of the Novel," Prof. Herbert Howarth, Uni- versity of Manitoba, 4:10 p.m., Thurs. in Aud. A, Angell Hall (July 26). Linguistics Forum Lecture: "Boundary Sinals" will be discussed by Miss Ilse Lehiste on Tues., July 24 at 7:30 p.m. In the R tckham Amphitheater. The Foreign Language Reading Exam- ination for the Master's Degree in Lin- guistics will be held on Fri., July 27. Those wishing to take the exam should maake appointments with Prof. Puigram. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Retail Furniture Co. in Wyandotte, Mich.-Recent grad, either male or fe- male, In field of Interior Decoration. Company Is going to establish a small studio in store area which would be devoted to draperies & interior decorat- Ing service. Seeking qualified person to build this kind of trade. Kellogg Co., Battle Creek, Mich. - Need grad to work as Assistant to Edi- tor of the Kellogg News. Responsibili- ties are primarily Intoral & written communications, BA with major in Eng- lish, Journalism or equivalent. Ability to write clearly & interestingly. Posi- tion involves considerable work in pho- tography & applicant should have in- terest in knowing or learning tech- niques required. Air Force Logistics Command, Wright- Patterson Air Force Base, O. - Position as Research Historian, Civil Service grade level GIS-9. Must have PhD in Social Sciences or in English; or MA plus 1 yr. additional grad study or 1 yr. research & writing exper. Eligible for promotion after 1 yr. The following part-time jobs are available. Applications for these jobs can be made in, the Part-time Place- ment Office, 2200 Student Activities Bldg., during the following hours: Mon. thru Fri. 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 1:30 til 5 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring students for part-time or full-time temporary work, should contact Bob Hodges, Part- time Interviewer at NO 3-1511, ext. 3553. Students desiring miscellaneous odd jobs should consult the bulletin board in Room 2200, daily. MALE 1-To sell fresh frozen crickets. Would need a car. Full-tixne for 2 months. Must know somethin gabout fish- ing. 1-Student in Psychology or Special Education, between the age of 20 and 25, to act as companion to a 20- year-old boy. Full time for 1%,z months. Must live in. 1-Good commercial artist for news- paper advertising, Part-time or full- time. 80-Psychological Subjects. Must be students. At least one, 2 hour ses- sion. FEMALE 1-Good commercial artist for news- paper advertising. Part-time or full- time. 2-Sales girls-long term. Would need transportation. 1-Histologist. Must have a natural science background with two years of college education. Experience not necessary. %-time, permanent posi- tion. 1-Food supervisor. Degree in dietetics or equivalent experience. Mon. thru Fri., 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. For further information, please General Div., Bureau of Appts., SAB, Ext. 3544. part-Time Employment call 3200 University of Michigan RINGS Haller's Jewelers 717 N. University Ave. DIAL 2-6264 ENDS TODAY "ADVISE AND CONSENT" Law Offices in Gary, Ind--Vacancy I~n office for recent grad who has passed his Bar, who is resident of this area, & who is interested in practicing in Gary. Firm is engaged in general practice of law; also have sizeable cas- ualty insurance clientele. -AP Wirephoto NEW BOSS IN WASHINGTON - Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor and President John F. Kennedy pose for the press shortly after Tay- lor's appointment as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He moves up to become along with Defense Secretary Robert S. Mc- Namara the prime defense policy-makers in Washington, Taylor will have to preside over meetings of the Joint Chiefs who, he said, shouldn't be there. The prospect of what this may mean doesn't seem to disturb Ken- nedy. Studied Cuba One of Taylor's first jobs for the President last year as his special military adviser was to study the failure of the disastrous Cuban in- vasion for which Kennedy took responsibility although his Joint Chiefs had been in on the plans for it. Late last year Kennedy sent Taylor to South Viet Nam to see what could be done to stop the Communist advance there through guerrilla war. When Taylor returned it was understood he advised against sending American troops into Viet Nam to fight but that he did sug- gest sending in military help in the form of planes, military ad- visers and experts to train the Vietnamese in guerrilla fighting. Exerts Influence Not long afterward the United States began sending helicopters into Viet Nam-they've helped in the fighting since-- and troops who, among other chores that avoided direct involvement, teach guerrilla fighting. Kennedy last year bought Tay- lor's "balance of forces" idea and cast aside "massive retaliation" as the all-purpose philosophy. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation INDIA ART SHOP SALE F * ENDS TONIGHT * "FROLICSOME...FUNNYa WORTH ANYBODY'S MONEY!" Dial 8-6416 I