THE MICHIGAN DAILY resses art Institute Anference AT JULY MEETING: Regents Approve Leaves For Faculty Members Amateur painters should be pa- tient in developing their work and self-judgment, Alfred P. Maurice, director of the Kalamazoo Insti- tute of Arts, said here yesterday. "Serious amateur painters should be humble and wait until they have a statement of value to make before showing their work," he urged at the eighth annual Re- gional Art Exhibition and Art Conference in Rackham Lecture Hall. Exhibition of works by some 140 Michigan artists will continue through Aug. 3. "There may be some excuse for a professional artist to place less than his best work before the pub- lic for he must earn his livelihood by creating what his client de- sires," Maurice said. "But there is never an excuse for an amateur artist to do so because he need only please himself." Maurice said museums and art centers should resist pressures to devote an undue amount of time and space to displaying the work of amateur painters. "Yielding to such pressures perverts the func- tion of these institutions and is a disservice to the artist himself because it limits the amount of truly outstanding work which is shown and from which the artist' himself can learn." Maurice maintains that "stand- ards of acceptance should be very, high" for amateur works to keep' shows from being "sops to the vanity of the ill-prepared." La w School Prof. Marston Bates of the zool- ogy department was granted leave for the second semester of the coming school year without salary at the Regents meeting Friday. .He has been asked to participate as a fellow in residence at the Center for Advanced Studies of Wesleyan University. George M. Bedross, research as- sistant at Willow Run Labora- tories, was granted leave without pay from June 10 through Sept. 10, 1960. He will be at work on a special project in Europe for an American business machines firm. Prof. Paul M. Giever, assistant professor of industrial health, was given leave for August without salary to conduct a special survey for an automobile corporation. To Visit Chile Prof. William S. Housel of the civil engineering department was given leave for a period of two weeks ending Aug. 28 without salary. He has been invited to deliver a series of lectures at the University of Chile, July 15 through Aug. 28. A two-year leave without salary. will permit Prof. Alvin D. Loving of the Flint College education school faculty to take part in a joint Anglo - American - Nigerian project to establish the first uni- versity in Nigeria. The United States International Cooperation Administration is one of the sponsors of the project, with Michigan State University and the University of London co- operating in assembling educators to get the new university into op- eration. To Continue Research Prof. Harold J. McFarlan of the geology department will ,use a sabbatical leave for the second semester of 1960-61 to do further research on the legal principles involved in land ownership and boundaries together with the rights and obligations of adjacent owners. A series of organ recitals in Europe and the United -States are rNOW in store of Prof. Robert Noehr who was granted leave from JL 1, 1960 to June 30, 1961. Prof. Martin L. Perl of t: physics department was giv leave, without salary for the flu semester of next year to cor plete a series of experiments u: der a grant from the Office Naval Research using the bevatr at the University of Calif orni, Groups Lag In Matching Income Gain A comparison of family incom in Wayne, Oakland, and Macon counties developed by the Unive sity's Detroit Area Study has foul that, during the past decade, pe: sioners, Negroes, and those lackii a high school education ha failed to match the income gai of most Detroiters. Between 1951 and 1959, t] median income of families wi a breadwinner in the labor for rose from.; $4,700 to $6,500, a per cent gain. Median income among those n in the labor force, including mai living on pensions, social securit and other fixed incomes, we: from $1,900 in 1951 to $2,400 la year, a gain of only 26 per cer Between 1951 and 1959, tl study showed, the median incon for white families in Detroit lj creased from $4,800 to $6,400, gain of 33 per cent. For NegroE income rose only eight per cent. from $3;500 to $3,800. One of the few workers to e: perience an actual income declii during this period was the avera; family breadwinner with less thf seven years formal educatio whose income dropped fron $3,51 to $3,800, a 20 per cent loss. Bargain Days Feature Art Fair Changes Set Two administrative appointments in the Law School received the approval of the Regents Friday. Associate Dean Russell A. Smith was given the additional title and responsibility of director of legal research to fill the vacancy left by the appointment of Allan F. Smith as dean. The new appointment is effective at the start of the 1960-61 University year. Charles W. Joiner. professor of law, will become associate dean, effective Sept. 1, 1960. Under the general supervision of the dean, he will promote close relationships with alumni and the bar, includ- ing participation and leadership in improvements in the law and administration of justice. An associate dean since 1956 Smith will retain this title but his duties, in addition to becoming director of legal research, will be revised to include service as chair- man of the faculty personnel re- cruitment committee, as chairman of the graduate and research com- mittee, in an advisory capacity to the dean on matters of adminis- ; tration and as vice-dean. Talner Takes Yale Position Prof. Norman S. Talner of the medical school has been appointed director of the cardiac - vascular and pediatric laboratory at Yale Unversity, it was announced yes- terday. Prof. Talner, of the pediatrics and communicable diseases de- partments, will assume his new " post Aug. 1 and will also hold the title of assistant professor of pediatrics at Yale. AFRICAN FILMS AFRICAN VIEW: An Account of a Journey from the Cape to Cairo Photographed and narrated by DOUGLAS D. CRARY, Department of Geography THE HUNTERS: The Story of the Bushmen of the Kalihari Desert THURSDAY, JULY 21, 7:00 P.M. DIA NO 2-6264 NEVER BEFORE ON THE SCREEN! JOSEPH E LEVINE:: PrESU4I5 ^SEE THE MAMMOTH , WAR OF THE CHARIOTS. THE1 GLORIES. THE TRIUiMP"Sm, THE CONQUESTS OF THE WORLD'S MIGHTIEST MAMI Fri. and Sat.-Folk songs (50c door charge) Sunday-JAZZ-9-12 p.m. (75c door charge) STEVE REEVES HERCULES SYLVA KOSCINA-PRIMO CARNERA w SYLVIA LOPEZ "° BRUNO VAILATI Y PIETRO FRANCISCI LUXDEFRANC POUCTION .EASTMAN COLOR by PATHE-DYALIScOPE OlmisumTsr WARNER BROS. Open daily 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. COMING Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's "THE LOST WORLD" I I -3 ...... SECOND DAY... Natural Science Auditorium Admission Free E' S.G.C. * *f TONIGHT and TOMORROW at 7:00 and 9:00 CITIZEN KANE (1941) "One of the twelve best films of all time" -Brussels Critics Poll I ,. DAILY PHOTO FEATURE by DAVID GILTROW DIAL NO 8-6416 "MAGNIFICENT I" -Bosley Crowther KNY., Times and 'F As Barga'in vays Extra Special for Friday and Saturday ZOO Dresses of all kinds and sizes $0.00 " It's your chance to choose from high quality wearables- all from our own regular stock of Spring and Summer suits - All wool coats ,huge group of better dresses of every kind including dark fall types - better jewelry - all handbags - a wide choice of jewelry at . , I I i s I /' GI) SNEAK AL No 5-6290 PREVIEW Ir Ll u c f-^ .6.~ r ON FOREST off corner pposite Parking r of S. University Campus Theatre at rear of store I I I I I I