WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1462 THE MICHIGAN' DAILY PAGE THREE WEDNESDAY, JULY 4,1982 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE POLIO THERAPY: Locate Clinic at U' Hospital Show Japanese Art Exhibit at UGLI CLASSIFIEDS By JOAN SIMPSON An experimental center of the National Polio Foundation is lo- cated at University Hospital. According to Prof. D.,G. Dick- inson, of the pediatrics depart- ment, director of the center, its purpose is to take care of patients having polio and other paralytic,' respiratory diseases, and acute arthritics, and-children with birth defects. The center is well-known for its emphasis on the training of a "medical team" and its develop- ment of new respirator equipment, he says. Two Engineers Several types of respirator. equipment are used. Prof. Dickin- son said that these include the iron lung, the rocking bed, thef chest shell, portable respirators, which can be attached to wheel- chairs, and infant respirators, de- veloped at the center, which "breathes" up to a rate of 200 times a minute. Two engineers are employed by the center to keep old equipment in order and de- velop new machines. The center itself is one ward they met when they were in the hospital. Prof. Dickinson added that in this way patients can find To Examine N Trial Problems Judge James J. Breakey, Jr., and Prof. Charles J. Joiner, of the law school, will participate in the. Pacific Northwest Seminar for Trial Judges, held in Seattle July 9 to 11. Breakey will speak and be a panelist on "Proceedings in Crim- inal Cases before Trial." Prof. Joiner will take part in a panel concerned with "Adopting Simpli- Aed Rules of Evidence." PROF. D. G. DICKINSON -.-,.polio center with a capacity of 15 patients. The patients are of all ages and of both sexes. Prof. Dickinson explained that this arrangement keeps the patients in contact with all kinds of people during the relatively iso- lated period of their illness. Patients do not spend the dura- tion of their illness in the hospital. They come to the center at the outset of their trouble.when they develop serious complications, when they need surgery, and when it is time for their periodic check- ups. Center News Sheet A publication sponsored by the center keeps the patients informed about where the people are that out when their friends are going to be in for check-ups and can arrange to be in at the same time. Prof. Dickinson pointed out that the patients have two TV sets on the ward, headphones for radio programs, direct bedside phone service, on-the-ward schooling for children unable to leave the ward, and an annual skit by the medical staff. They even have hamburger fries on the terrace adjoining the ward which are attended by every- one on the ward, including those in iron lungs. Patients receive treatment in the physical medicine department through use of hubbard tanks, whirlpool baths, standing boards to help patients adjust to a verti- cal position, and parallel bars for learning to walk. Shrinking Muscles Prof. Dickinson added that much surgery is performed on pa- tients with twisted and shrinking muscles, twisted spines and de- formed lung cavities. (One little girl had just had a spinal fusion and was to be in a body cast for the next six months.) One of the major purposes of the occupational therapy depart- ment is teaching skills for every- day living such as making a bed from a wheelchair, picking up a telephone receiver with a weak hand, getting into bed from a wheelchair. This department also teaches handicrafts to help pa- tients use certain weak muscles. Prof. Dickinson added that even patients in iron lungs can be taught certain skills, such as writ- ing and painting by holding the pencil or brush in their mouth. By BRUCE CHARNOV One hundred contemporary Japanese prints, one of several traveling foreign art exhibitions sponsored by the Oregon State University Memorial Union, are now being displayed at the Under- graduate Library. The prints are designed by the "s o s a j u hanga" printmakers. These reflect their consciousness of the earlier "Ukiyoe" disciplines of art, but also display a passive trend toward modern times, Prof. Gordon W. Gilkey, head of the Oregon State University art de- partment explained in an accom- panying folder. The making of prints is an old and honorable art in Japan. Be- ginning in ancient times with simple black-and-white woodcuts, this art rapidly advanced to color prints upon fine linen paper, Prof. Gilkey said. Intalagio Process Recently several Japanese art- ists have turned to the intalagio process, or engraving prints in copperplate and then pressing them into the paper. In the past the tradition was to engrave the prints into fine grain wood and let the grain emphasize the high- lights of the composition, he added. Included in the exhibit are prints by such widely known Jap- anese artists as: Sugano, Miyashi- ta, and Fukazawa. Deep-Etched Prints Sugano and Miyashita have made some stunning deep-etch copperplate prints, while Fuka- zawa is famous for his use of soft ground textures and lines, Prof. Gilkey noted. Also in this exhibit are prints by Kumagai and Amano, who by building up cloth textures on wood and using a combination of inking techniques, secure some unusual 1 color textures, he added. MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2.40 4.20 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 overage words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily Phone NO 2-4/86 BIKES AND SCOOTERS CUSHMAN MOTOR SCOOTER. Good condition. Lights, storage compart. Make an offer. Call after 6 NO 3-2089. Z4 USED CARS 1961 SAAB-Fully equipped. 13,000 miles. Best offer. NO 2-2763. N3 FOR SALE - '56 Volkswagen, rebuilt motor, radio. In top condition. $695.00. Phone YU 2-5551 Port Huron, Mich. N2 MISCELLANEOUS SOUTH CENTRAL MICHIGAN Soaring Society memberships open. Located in Napoleon, Mich. Call NO 8-8338 after 6 P.M. I M4 DO YOU FEEL LOST at college? Do you feel out of it because you don't know what's going.on? Subscribe to the summer Daily. Only $2.00. Call 662- 3241. M3 BUSINESS SERVICES MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION-Mimeo- graphing-transcription. 334 Catherine Phone 665-8184. J11 HARPSICHORD INSTRUCTION by grad- uate of Yale Shool of Music. Call NO 8-8309. J10 WANTED TO BUY WANT TO BUY LIGHTWT GIRLS BIKE Sandy Johnson, NO 5-4453. KI BARGAIN CORNER MEN'S WEAR; SUMMER SPECIALS. Short sleeve sport shirts $1.25 up; Wash & wear pants $3.95, 4.95, 5.95; Briefs or shorts 69c; Canvas casuals $2.95-3.95. Many other BIG BUYS. SAM'S STORE, 122 E. Washington St. Wi LOST AND FOUND LOST-Daily photographers. Positions open now. Join the staff and earn real money. See Mike at 420 Maynard. A2 FOUND-A good place to spend your spare time earning money. Join The Daily photography staff. See Mike at 420 Maynard. Al FOR SALE 740 c.c. Harl-Dav. motorcycle, $500. NO 5-4453 at 12:15 and 6:00. B7 FOR SALE-1960 Volvo; radio, heater, whitewalls, 4-speed. Excellent shape. Phone 479-7436. N4 GET into the swing of things. Order your summer Daily now!!! Call 662- 3241. B2 DIAMONDS-Wholesale from our mines to you. Buy direct and save. Robert Haack Diamond Importers, 504 First National Bldg. NO 3-0653. B5 TRANSPORTATION -Daily-Bruce Charnov YOUNG FACES-The print is one of 100 Japanese prints now on display at the Undergraduate Library. The exhibit , features the works of contemporary Japanese artists working in ancient mediums. The' collection is sponsored by Oregon State University. MODERN ALGEBRA: NSF Grant To Maintain Teacher's Math Institute Cal-O3*5 1 .... ..- Call NO 3-4158 Special weekend rates from 5 p.m. Friday till 9 a.m. Monday . $15.00 plus 9c a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. Famine, H By JOHN RODERICK Associated Press News Analyst T 0 K Y 0 - Three uninvited guests have for centuries clung to the Chinese peasant's spare body with the tenacity of blood suckers. They are famines, hunger and malnutrition. Gaunt-eyed, they stride onto the ravaged land in the wake of droughts which leave the earth cracked and blistered, of floods which cover it with a muddy sea, of swarms of locusts blackening the sky and of man's unending wars which desolate the rich coun- tryside. In the not so distant past, mil- lions of Chinese died a lingering, pain-wracked death because when the land and its crops failed, there was no communication system to bring them relief supplies in time. Misery Again Floods, drought, locusts and Communist mismanagement have again brought misery to China's millions. unger, Malnutrition Plague China MADRAS SH IRTS SALE PRICED 4.98 Drought today is menacing thef rice crop in South China's Kwang-F si province.c In the past two years natural calamities have sent the Chinesej peasant reeling backward, blasted his hopes for the good harvests he needs to keep himself and theE Red regime alive.- Searing Heat Nearly every province in China has felt the searing heat of7 drought. China's wheat belt - Hopei, Honan, Shantung, ShansiI and Shensi provinces -- have suf- fered the most. At least 20 of the country's 26 provinces have felt the scourge either of drought or floods. Mil- lions of tons of water destroyed crops in South China's populous Kwangtung province, Manchuria's Hei-Lungkiang and Shantung provinces. The starvation which in the past would have automatically fol- lowed these natural catastrophes apparently does not exist on the mainland. A network of railways, canals, roads and airlines criss- crossing the vast country helps bring relief goods to the stricken areas. Hunger Present But famine's ugly sisters, hun- ger and malnutrition are, accord- ing to reliable accounts, every- where. The over-worked Chinese mil- lions, to whom want and scarcity are almost commonplace, have been reduced to a diet which hov- ers between 1,800 and 1,950 cal- ories a day, well below the mini- mal standard for none-too-rich Asia. In Shanghai, families lick the last bit of oil from their dinner plates. And one junior Communist official who escaped to Hong Kong reports "You've got to steal to stay alive in Communist China." Disease Widespread Beri beri, peripheral oedema, night blindness and liver disorders -all products of malnutrition- are widespread. All reports indicate that the farmer, now being urged to re- double his efforts toward obtain- ing good harvests, is better off than the proletariat of the cities. He gets more food, more consumer goods and can keep the food he grows in private plots of land. But hunger is sapping the na- tion's energy. It weakens the vic- tim and knocks out his will to resist. No Uprisings Perhaps for this reason, and be- cause Red leader Mao Tze-Tung has insured the loyalty of his troops by giving them more gener- ous food rations, there are no con- firmed reports of major uprisings against the Red regime. In January this year, arrivals from the mainland said that the authorities have called for in- creased vigilance against sabotage and subversion. In March, the Chinese National- ist news agency carried an uncon- firmed report of the revolt of some 8,000 persons who seized rice from commune granaries and distribut- ed it to the hungry. The uprising assertedly covered three. counties and resulted in bitter fighting. In April, the independent Hong Kong newspaper New Life Evening Post said that 1,000 rebellious Red troops had taken to the hills to wage guerrilla warfare against the Communists. Guerrilla Warfare - Unrest has been reported in Fukien province, closest to Nation- alist China. But there has been no reliable evidence of a ground-swell of re- volt throughout the country which might seriously endanger the re- gime's control. The situation, however, could change. New calamities, an ex- ploding population and general weariness could one day drive the peasants past the explosion point. By MICHAEL SATTINGER With a $14,000 appropriation from the National Science Foun- dation, the University is sponsor- ing an institutehfor junior and senior high school teachers in mathematics during the 1962-63 school year. About 60 public and private school teachers from within a 70- mile radius have registered in the graduate school and will receive credit for in-service training. That is, they will continue to teach while being trained. The participants will attend two courses lasting three hours which will be held Saturday mornings throughout the year. The NSF will pay for tuition, fees, travel and textbooks for those persons ac- cepted to the program. Math Courses Prof. Brumfiel of the math de- partment will teach the courses in modern algebra, r o u g h l y equivalent to Math 412 and 415. One of the problems found in such a program is the vast differ- ences in the mathematical back- grounds of the individuals, Prof. Brumfiel said. A similar institute covering number theory and geometry was held last year for a slightly small- er number of teachers. A proposal for an institute to cover mathe- matical analysis next year is planned by the math department. Broad Program The institute is part of a broad NSF educational program running under grants of over $30 million. Similar institutes are being held on hundreds of other campuses. The subjects covered include not only mathematics but also the natural sciences. Prof. Brumfiel is co-author of an entirely new series of modern textbooks for junior and senior high school students. He also taught in last year's institute. The Brumfiel-Shanks-Eicholz series, named after the authors, will eventually cover algebra and geometry for the eighth through twelfth grades. The series was written under the Ball State project, one of the few important textbook projects in the country. The books employ the methods of modern mathematics, with emphasis placed on proof and theory. 'U' Sanitation Expert .dies Prof. William C. Hoad, founder of the University's sanitary engi- neering program died recently at his home, at age eighty-eight. Serving as head of the sanitary' engineering program from 1912 until his retirement in 1945, Hoad was well known nationally as a sanitary engineer. He also was a consultant to many cities on sani- tary engineering problems. Before coming to the University, Prof. Hoad was chief engineer of the Kansas State Board of Health and professor at the University of Kansas. Variety is the SPICE OF RALPH'S MARKET Picnic Supplies Party Foods Kitchen Supplies Kosher Foods 709 PACKARD-OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT J6 FOR RENT SUMMER APT. for 2 or 3 on campus. Call NO 8-8601. CS FOR RENT-Good garage. Near State and Packard. NO 2-0521 or 917 Mary Street. C21 FOR RENT-Campus four room apt. Summer price $60. Phone NO 3-4322. C19 FOR RENT-2 bdrm. unfurnished house. Utility room-screened porch. $115 per month. Call NO 5-6772. C14 FOURTH GIRL TO SHARE HOUSE- Will have own room. $50 July and Aug. 2-2169. C23 APT. ON HILL ST. for 1 or 2 students for fall-a11 furnished and utilities paid. Call NO 8-9538 or 2-3512. C10 Summer Rates Furnished apts. from $60 up. NO 5-9405. C20 FOR RENT-Lake front home 12 miles from Ann Arbor, near US-23. 4 bdrms. furnished, insulated, gas heat. $125 per month. Winter lease-Sept. to June. Phone GE 7-2271. C24 NEW twu bedroom apartment units now being completed on South Forest for Sept. occupancy. For appoint, to see, call Karl D. Malcolm, Jr. Realtor NO 3-0511. C2 SUBLET immediately for summer. Two bedrm., cool basement apt. Recently redecorated, very comfortable, good location, reduced price. Call 665-8944 evenings or 663-1511, ext. 277 days. Ask for Bev. C4 514 E. WASHINdTON ST. PERSONAL CRAW, why must you be such a slave driver. The helpless one. F4 HURRYI! Singers needed immediately for Univ. Summer Choir. See Dr. Ali- feris, Lane Hall. Flo CREATIVITY STIFLED? Join The Daily photography staff. Financial remuner- ation. See Mike at 420 Maynard. F10 RECORD CLU$ needs members. We spend the evening in dark rooms list- ening to records. Meet at Engin Arch evenings at 9:30, bring date and rec- ords. F3 HELP WANTED WE NEED HELP. Join The Daily pho- tography staff now. Earn while enjoy- ing life at The Daily. See Mike at 420 Maynard. H3 COLLEGE MEN Part time nelp-17 hours per week. Summer school student preferred. Working schedule will be arranged to fit class and study schedule if neces- sary. Salary offered-$50 per week. Call Mr. Miller, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., 662-9311. 1H1 01 UGLI Presents Double Feature The two movies "Umbrella" and "Quetico" will be shown at 2 p.m., tomorrow in the Multipurpose Rm. of the Undergraduate Library. Coeds: "Let us style a FLATTERING HAIR-DO to your individual needs." - no appointments needed - The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre JULY SHOE SALE- -Daily-Michael de Gaetano FAMINE-Hunger, malnutrition and its attendant diseases stalk the people of the Chinese mainland, especially in the central plain and the Canton region near Hong Kong (circled). Despite these deprivations the Communists have managed to keep the loyalty of the people although several thousand fled to Hong Kong when the opportunity permitted. DRAST IC R EDUCTIONS on Men's and Women's Shoes. SAVE $$$ FOR WOMEN Entire Stock of Spring and Summer Dress Styles I ------ M FOR MEN Authentic and woven India Madras. Button-down collar. Short Sleeved Assorted Colors "T rian pj Over Tradition" 1209 South University Open Monday till 8:30 P.M. FLORSH ElMS $16 80 - $1880 Reg. to 22.95 All Summer Shoes and Discontinued Styles 450 PAIRS $8 90 Reg. to 12.95 $1190 $690 Reg, to 10.95 .d $890 Reg. to 12.95 Black Patent - Black, Blue, Red, Bone White Calf Hi and Mid Heels CASUAL SPORT STYLES $390w $490 -$590 Wedge and Barefoot Sandals Flats - Loafers - Sport Ties STACKED HEELS by Pierre - Coach & Four - Allures $490 to$89 I SERVICES* " Dry Cleaning * Repairs * Shirt Finishing * Drop Off Laundry " Coin Operated Self-Serve Laundry ESKIMO PRINTS 'FEATURES " 24-Hour Service... Sooner on Request " Off-Street Parking " Automobile Window Service " Guaranteed Satisfaction " New Techniques and Equipment rar ri s Reg. to 16.95 Vent-Ties - Loafers - Slip-Ons WASHABLE CASUALS by Kedettes - Oomphies II I U