MLY 29,1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VAVI .' ILY 29 1960THE MCHIGA DAIL _____________________________________________________________ - - a--- _ i i. . _ hologist Analyzes 'Picnic' Characters Education Influences By JUDY OPPENHEIM n William Inge's play, "Picnic," h of the women must make a ice between love and something she wants at the same time, f. Jesse E. Gordon of the psy- logy department explained. he Pulitzer prize - winning ma which opened last night at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre ws the reaction of the women % small midwestern town to the val of an exciting stranger at end of a sultry summer. His Bence causes the motivations ind each of their decisions to ae to the surface. Marries for Love 'lo, the mother of two teen-age ghters, Madge and Milly, comes m a successful middle - class ily. She married her husband ely for love, but discovered later that love alone was not enough for her. Her husband was unable to provide for her the material com- forts she wanted, and she thus lost her middle-class position. After a series of violent quarrels, the marriage broke up and thus Inge's main point, that love is incompati- ble with marital happiness in any respectable sense, was established before the play actually began. Fears Mistakes Flo does not want her daughters to repeat her mistakes and is therefore anxious that Madge, who at 18 is the beauty of the town, marries a wealthy boy who can give her a large home and charge ac- counts. However, she has never talked much with her daughter about either her own marriage or the more general subject of the place of love in life. Prof. Gordon said that psycho- logically her reticence in discuss- ing the subject reveals that her own conflicts on it are not . yet resolved. At the end of the play, Flo says that there are still many things she could have told Madge. Probes Self Madge wonders whether behind her beauty is a real personality, and discovers finally that what she truly wants is a strong, dominat- ing husband and physical love in- stead of the respectable middle- class marriage her mother envi- sions for her. Sixteen-year-old Milly, Madge's younger sister, is still in what Prof. Gordon termed the "pre- adolescent" stage. She rejects femininity and denies any inter- est in boys or love. A large part of Milly's trouble stems from the fact that she is not as pretty or socially adept as FOR QUALITY'S SAKE: Author Warns Against Large Business Schools U.S. Voters GRAD S.TUDENT COUNCIL Presents SOCIAL HOUR 5-7 .. . each Friday in July VFW CLUB 314 East Liberty everyone must be 21 or over vI s t. i, r I1 4 f ~ S.G.C. TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9:00' HOME OF THE BRAVE~ 1949 Produced by STANLEY KRAMER with JAMES EDWARDS, LLOYD BRIDGES, FRANK LOVEJOY, STEVE BRODIE The experimental film THE CAGE ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM- 50c The American non-voter usually is a person of low education, in- come and socio-economic status, three University faculty members said 'yesterday on a WUOM radio program. Donald E. Stokes, Survey Re- search Center study director, said "In general, people who have an intense preference are more likely to vote." Many people just have a specta- tor's interest in politics, Warren E. Miller, SRC assistant program di- rector noted. Among persons with more than average schooling there is a social obligation to vote, he said, adding: "The educational system conveys the feeling that the good citizen participates in elections by voting." Miller said that education plays a large role in political participa- tion. "It exposes students to a great deal of political information, gives, them a sense of political effectiveness and civic duty. Non- voters don't feel that their vote makes a difference and they don't think that it is their duty to vote." Miller said the election of 1948 probably received as much cover- age by the mass media as any other recent election, but "people didn't see it as an important elec- tion. The candidates were not too attractive and neither were the issues. "The 1952 election was a good example of an election considered important by the voters. There was a growing legacy of charges of corruption and it was clear that voters were troubled by the Kor- ean War," he pointed out. In ex- plaining some of the reasons why a case could be made for low voter turnout in the United States, Stokes said: "Some flexibility would go out of our system if everyone participated." Astronomer Explains Plan At Symposium Prof. Leo Goldberg, chairman of the astronomy department, has been in Liege, Belgium this week, describing United States plans for Sspace solar telescope instrumenta- tion at an international sympos- ium meeting. The satellite, to be launched in about a year by a Thor-Delta rocket, is specifically designed for astronomical research. Powered by solar batteries, the satellite will carry ultraviolet spectroscopes, X-ray and gamma ray detectors and radio astronomy receivers. It will be stabilized by gas jets so it can be pointed at the sun at all times. Colleges concerned with quality should keep the lid on undergrad- uate enrollment in business ad- ministration, Associate Prof. James E. Howell of Stanford University says in the current University Business Review. Unless this is done, business ed- ucation will be swamped by the need to "man the blackboards," he warns. At present, one out of every five bachelor's degrees in the country goes to business administratilon students-but fewer doctorates are awarded in business than any other field. Co-author of a major study on "Higher Education for Business," Howell fears business school stan- dards may drop as degrees sky- rocket from a total of 50,000 now to more than 100,000 by 1970. The "open door" admissions policies of many schools, both now and in the past, has prevented a rise in entrance and achievement standards comparable to other professions, he notes. "The crying need in business is for more graduates of above aver- age ability . .. not for more and more mediocre graduates with watered down ... degrees." In the coming decade, he con- cludes, "Better faculties will try to hold the line on undergraduate teaching so as to protect other activities. "Some faculties will no doubt concentrate their scarce energies on master's level training. This 'U' Trains Pliant Staff The engineering department has set up an intensive 10-week sum- mer course to train Consumers Power Co. personnel scheduled to supervise the operation of the Big Rock Point nuclear power plant under construction near Charle- voix. The course is being directed by Prof. F. G. Hammitt, who says "the training course includes ma- terialusually given in our intro- ductory graduate courses, with ad- ditional specific application to nu- clear power plant technology. Some use will be made of our Ford Nuclear Reactor. The University course is in- tended to provide background for the Consumers Power Co. person- nel and is the first phase of a two-year training program in nu- clear plant operation. "Additional training will'include work in existing nuclear power plants before the company's per- sonnel assume responsibility for operation of the Big Rock Point plant," he continued. The program is expected to be helpful to University staff as well. should be encouraged by all inter- ested parties-students, professors, and employers. "Similarly, some schools who do not do so now will become strict upper division schools, not admit- ting students until the junior year. Others may wish to explore a three-two compromise, whereby a two-year professional program is preceded by three rather than two or four years of pre-professional work." The entire issue of the current Michigan Business Review is de- voted to comments on business education at the college level. Nunn Given Asian Grant 1fOSIC S60PS --CAMPUS. 211 S. Stets NO 8-9013 I -DOWNTOWN-- 205 E. Liberty NO 2-0175 i 1' I I The head of Asia Library, G. the University's Raymond Nunn, Starts Today at Lave - Laughter Romance! Avwwftfth PROF. JESSE E. GORDON ... analyzes characters Madge. At the end of the play she gains poise and self-assurance, but Prof. Gordon points out that she still has not acquired the feminine interest in romance and marriage which characterizes most girls of her age. Wants Respectability Rosemary, the unmarried school- teacher who lives with the family is very anxious to be respectable and independent. Actually, she is very unsuccess- ful at suppressing her own sexual needs and as a result is overzealous in condemning anything with sen- sual overtones. After the stranger's arrival in town her attitude sud- denly changes and she begs her boyfriend, a local shopkeeper, to marry her. CAFE PROMETH EAN -- 508 E. William Wed. and Thurs.-Poetry Fri. and Sat.-Folk songs (50c door charge) Sunday-JAZZ-9-12 p.m. (75c door charge) Open doily 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. DIAL NO8-6416 Now Through Saturday I has been appointed investigator and director of a Chinese research project sponsored by the Associa- tion for Asian Studies. The two-year project -il be un- dertaken by Nunn with a grant of $25,530 from the National Science Foundation. The subject for the investigation will concern the development of publishing and information sys- tems in the social, natural and applied sciences in mainland China in the period 1949-59. Nunn recently concluded nego- tiations for the purchase of $24,000 )f microfilm . from Hong Kong, which will include a two-million item clipping file and a large number of periodical and news- paper files from mainland China. The microfilm will be deposited in the Mid-West Library Center at Chicago. "The importance of this can be realized from the fact that almost all scholarly periodicals and all but one newspaper have been pro- hibited for export from mainland China," he said. Scholars Use Survey Data Nine American scholars are at- tending the summer Workshop on Use of Consumer Survey Data at the University. The workshop is the first in a series designed to make informa- tion from the University's Survey of Consumer Finances more read- ily available to the academic world and more useful for tests of eco- nomic theory. It is financed by a grant from the Ford Foundation. The workshop is conducted by the University Survey Research Center's Economic Behavior Pro- gram. NOW! THE I1087A AZING I FALL POSIB WORf S f, - DIAL NO 2-6264 I TONIGHT TOMORROW NIGHT I 8:00 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Final performances of William Inge's Pulitzer prize-winning drama PRODUCER ... Fred Clark at hit funniest' N The bounciest fun show of 1960- 'ges are= Rig ng METRO , Z a CINEMASCOPE ' HEAD OPERATOR The Cops kntw all her numbers! DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN - ~ - ~ ~- --.-- - - -~ - SONGS "Just In Time" "Bella Are Ringing" "I Met A Girl" and many more! JUDY 1U ,ARTIf FRED CLARK with EDDIE FOY, Jr. JEAN STAPLETON THE BOOKIL HNo l ow N 14e1y" " OMII N ii I N brought the classics to the racetrack' ruse try ( SY - As Preseted On tie iage tj lie heatre Gud 4 Shows Doilyof 1:00 -3:35 -6:10 --8:47 PLUS &16n Wayne Sophia Laren Roimo Drazzi (Continued from Page 2) Recitals Student Recital: Robert Quayle will present a recital in Aud. A, Angell Hall on Fri., July 29, at8:30 p.m., in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Music (wind in- struments). Mr. Quayle will include in his program compositions by Vivaldi, Bourdeau, Bozza, Handel, Cervetto, Faure, Ibert, Reicha. Open to the pub- lic, Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Thomas Edwin Linton, Education; thesis: "A Historical Examination of the Purposes and Practices of the Education Pro- gram of the United Automobile Work- ers of America, 1936-1959." Chairman, C. A. Eggertsen. Fri., July 29, 10:00 a.m. 4024 University High School. Doctoral Examination for Lawrence Kenneth Williams, Psychology; thesis: "The Measurement of Risk-Taking Propensity in an Industrial Setting," Fri., July 29, 7615 Haven Hall, at 10:00 a.m. Chairman F. C. Mann. Doctoral Examination for Marion Berta Gross Sobol, Economics; thesis: "Correlates of Present and Expected Future Work Status of Married Wo- men," Fri., July 29, 2A Economics Bldg., at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, J. B. Lansing. Placement Notices A leading publishing firm needs sci- entific literature analyst. B.S. in Phys- ics, Electronics, Metallurgy, Mathe- matics, Mechanical Engineering, Com- munications, etc. Dayton, Ohio. New York City or Town of Normal, Ill. City Manager; Administrative position. Experience not necessary. Bus. Ad. or Engr. Metropolitan Planning Dept., Marion, Co., Ind. Sociologist. M.A. Sociology or B.A. plus 2-3 yrs. experience. City plan- ning research studies and assignments. Armstrong Cork Co., Lancaster, Pa. Openings available, Technical (Engi- neer, Chemist, Physicist), Nontechnical (Advertising, Promotion, Public Rela- tions, Credit Management, Market Re- search. Transamerican Freight Lines, Inc. Detroit, Mich. Accounting major. Male under 30 yrs. Accounts Receivable Dept. Scott Paper Co., Chester, Pa. Oppor- tunities for Engineers (Machine De- sign, Chemical, Mechanical, Industrial), Patent Attorney (6 yrs. experience, B.S. Ch.E. preferred), and Management De- velopment Trainees. Standard Oil Co. (Ohio), Cleveland. Openings in Accounting, Bus. Ad., Chemistry, Engineering, Industrial Re- lations, Mathematics. Also 10 openings for Marketing Management " Trainees (B.A., B.S,, or M.B.A.). National Forge Co., Irvine, Pa. Cost Control Supervisor. 23-28 yrs., ideally possesses M.B.A., minimum of 2-4 yrs. experience in Corp. budget or cost. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 4021 Admin. Bldg. The following schools have listed teaching vacancies for the 1960-61 school year, Fostoria, O. (St. Wendelin High Sch.) -English or History. Garden City, Mich.-English/Speech. Garden City, New York - Guidance Counselor. Rogers City, Mich.-7 & 8th grade English, Art, HS Biology. , For any additional information con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg. NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. Box office open 10-8 daily $1.75 $1.25 Next week: Mozart's opera, "DON GIOVANNI." Purchase reservations now at box office. Extra per- formance Mon., Aug. 8. - Dept. of Speech I -- -- .__. w_ . _ __ . . ---- - - __ __. _ - -- _____ ,e4ar .',~,%in wol lidly ', , ""Il 1 Print4 S "'TI ~w \\ wejdin EXTRA SPE, For Today 2000D (N~ SIZES 7-15, 10-44.1 4}:: Y ~ :CIAL VALUES and Saturday -RESSES 0 each' 10 12 -26/2 - To 1110-20 I f you are planning one, we ely will enjoy helping you rking out the details of your ed needs. 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