PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. MARCH 29. 191M PAETOTE IhG NDIL T +V ~AWl~ i vLFJLA;, l anart rr ao, IUD Ml 'Writing on the Wall Dialogue of Political 'Reveals mu~ * AT DEARBORN ESTATE: Summer Fair Lane Concert Series LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, March 28, 12:00 Noon Subject: "SOCIOLOGICAL IMPRESSIONS OF MEXICO" By NEAL BRUSS The handwriting on the walls of a stall in an UGLI John continues. Unlike mundane, traditional graf- fiti, the UGLI inscriptions provide a unified multi-ideological philo- political dialogue: "Communism has killed tens of millions of people including my family," according to one writer. "How about a new system," an- other suggested. "Is all western civilization next," the first continued. "Hopefully," another wrote. The messages are scrawled on New Program Aids Teachers In 'Core-City' Schools By NANCY SHAW "How do you hold on to your good ideas in the face of 30 or 40 other intransigent teachers? No one gets trained for this," Prof. David Angus of the School of Education referred to the prob- lems that teachers face when go- ing into urban disadvantaged schools. To remedy the problem,'he and Prof. Melvyn Semmel, of the edu- cation school, will begin directing a radical program called Advanced Study in Elementary Core-City Teaching from this A u g u s t through June of 1968. Twenty-four teachers will enroll in Rackham to be trained as ac- tive leaders in social change under the University's School of Educa- tion. The applicants, who will be chosen during April, must have taught at least three years al- ready in urban disadvantaged ele- mentary schools. They must agree to return to that same school sys- tem to work a year after they finish the Core-City program. Al- so required are a recommendation from a representative of the dis- advantaged community and from a local school official. Teachers who are perceived as outsiders, hostile to the disadvan- taged community's life style, and who try- to win the children to their own are typical now, 'says the proposal for the program. The root of the problem is in the model for education of the disadvantaged-it is now based on a medical model of illness, says Angus. The need, then, is to pay more attention to the "pathologi- cal, nature of the environment so that the disadvantaged child is perceived as a dignified human being trying desperately to ful- fill his psycho-social needs with- in a totally inadequate socio-cul- tural milieu," as the proposal says. ThegSocialist is to learn the strategies for change. To bring the adults into greater rapport with the school system, the pro- gram's directors are sugesting that the school be opened up as a center of the community. It can be used as a job clearing agency, as a center for information on legal aid, medicine, training, and welfare, and a service to 'help on things like tax forms. The University's program is a part of the Experienced Teacher Fellowship Program of the Na- tional Office of Education, part of the Department of Health, Ed- ucation and Welfare. HEW is subsidizing 70 of these programs nationwide. It is giving $60,000 to the University for this one, as well as a $4,800 stipend to each fellow, and an allowance for de- pendents. The fellows will receive credit toward or beyond the mas- ter's degree. The proposal for the Core-City program, whose acceptance was announced in February, was co- authored by Angus, Semmel, and Prof. Matthew Trippe of the education school. Trippe is chair- man of the National Steering Committee Task Force for the NDEA Institute for Advanced Study in Teaching Disadvantaged Youth. i inkers the painted walls of the stalls. The walls look like they have been scrubbed down many times. But the graffiti dialectic continues: "Whoever wrote this is a punk." "Whoever wrote this is an ass." "Aren't we all?" "Ideologies don't kill, people do." "Yes, but who make the ideol- ogies, Rabbits?" "That's the point . . . People make the ideologies and people kill." "And this is a lack of commu- nication." "Sour grapes." "Hitler had the right idea-. - Kil the damn Jews." "The only good Yankee is a dead one." "Join the army to aid this cause." "The media is the message." "America... I like it." "Mene, Mene Teckel Upharzen." "f(x) --lnx.", The moving hand writes...' Phoije 434-0190 Entane0 ,CARPENTER ROAD 1 Free OPEN 6:30 P.M. Free Heaters NOW SHOWING Heaters IEnd~lesS ummer IN COLOR Shown at 9 P.M Only The University Musical Society resented by the Baroque Orchestra will present the first "Fair Lane of the Chicago Symphony. Jean Festival" this summer at the Uni- Martinon, musical director and vi- versity's Dearborn Campus. olinist, will open the Festival on The concerts will be performed June 4 with two programs of Bach in the open air outside Fair Lane sonatas and concertos. mansion, the home of the late On the following Sunday, June Henry Ford. The United States 11, the Baroque Orchestra re- Department of the Interior desig- turns from Chicago under the di- nated Fair Lane one of America's rection of Antonio Janigro, guest historics landmarks in December, conductor and cello soloist, to per- 196'. The 200-acre estate is now form two programs of Italian ba- the property of the University. roque music -- Vivaldi, Pergolesi The Festival is being inaug- and Corelli- urated by the Musical Society in Opera Production collaboration with the Dearborn From the Caramoor Festival, Campus as a feature of the Uni- opera production under Julius versity's Sesquicentennial celebra- Rudel, music director and organ- tion. It will begin the society's ist, two recent works of Benjamin 89th season of concert presenta- Briten will be presented July 5-6 tions. in costume by a company of 25 'Festival of Festivals' singers and instrumentalists. One The summer's theme will be of the numbers, "Curlew River," "Festival of Festivals," and will is a modern musical adaptation of include representatives of four es- the 12th century Japanese Noh tablished festivals: The June Fes- drama, "Sumidagawa." tival of the Chicago Symphony The other, "The Burning Fiery Orchestra, the Caramoor Festival Furnace," is the story about Sha- of Upper New York State, the drach, Meshack, and Abednego Bath Festival of England, and the and their defiance of King Ne- stratford Festival of Ontario. buchadnezzar of Babylon. This The "June Festival" will be rep- opera will be premiered at Cari- moor this summer before the Fair Lane presentation. From the Bath Festival, Yehudi Menuhin and the Bath Festival Orchestra will appear in their first brief visit to America, on Sunday, July 16. A pair of pro- grams will feature Menuhin as conductor and violinist and his sister, Hephzibah, as piano soloist. Works by Handel, Mozart, Haydn, Bach, Purcell, and contemporaries Britten, Blackwood, and Goehr will be programmed. From the Stratford Festival, for the first time outside of Stratford, the National Festival Orhestra will appear in two concerts to close the Fair Lane Festival on July 23. Oscar Shumsky, music director, will lead the orchestra and per- form as solo violinist. Jose Iturbi will be the featured piano soloist. For reservations, call 662-5529 Graduate Student in Spanish Sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center Offers Opera, Orchestral Production ATID United Synagogue College Youth Ai Wednesday at 7:00 P.M. DR. JAMES GINDIN Associate Professor of English "'Color Me Jewish" Dessert, Refreshments Optional Hot Supper: Call 663-4129 Speaker: Sister Renee (USA) 4 Lose Something? Find it with a Daily Classified 1429 HILL STREET ALL WELCOME amma I? .. -- sy, I M..,- I U' ALSO . - Shock After Shock "PARIS SECRET" -In Color- Shown at 7:20 Only PRESENTS THE apa REPERTORY COMPANY Use Daily Classified Ads, "The Nation's Finest Company" *4 A 6°h FALL FESTIVAL o, 3 NEW PRODUCTIONS IY -MIno CINEMA II presents IRMA LA DOUCE FRIDAY & SATURDAY 6:30 & 9:15 P.M. Positively SEST L OF Ends "PSTFILMOF Wednesday! National Society of film Criis A Carlo Ponti Production Antonioni 's BLOW-UP Vanessa Redgrave David Hemmings - Sarah Miles COLOR Recommended far A Premier Poducions Co., Inc. Release The lxitlwitHi E dot. dmauti Michel de Ghelderode's ,hums to make ryVod. OCT. tats, 17.22 Tihe AMERCA PREMIERE of Eugene Ionxesco's '.the djeath of £.s'~ynen. d the 1967PaSM... 7kJ4rteed by bneuMWaoma OCT. 14.1, OCT 11-ROV. Oft, of the d..ie Assm oaed.i.. of the, Twtms THE 111'1W-111U by Pain.. Pte. mynno George Kelly !7 a 11 Dial 8-6416 "FARENHEIT 451" I1 Starting Thursday: _ _ _-- i SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. Only Aud. A, Angell Hall 50C Il.D. ,Required TOE THE MIRISCH CORPORATION THE DAVID MW1FT PRODUCTION Of C )AY x ., NOW S THE TRIUMPHANT FINALE OF THE 1966 NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL ! HOWING MUCH GE MEN'S GLEE' Aj , 'I 4 THIS WEEK Thursday, Friday EL (This Strange Passion) dir. Luis Bunvel, 1953 Spanish, subtitles. Indictment of bourgeois repression and orthodox Christianity Short: "LONELY BOY" Study of Paul Anka Saturday, Sunday A SHADOW OF DOUBT ROOTU UO43 0 SU C!C4 THE ~M0"~ IIcHeLe te PANAVISION COLOR by Delue 1:00-3:00-4:55 705-9:1 1 ; T ATiE Dial NO 2-6264 Ending Thursday Dial 5-6290 CLUB one-hundred ninth annual 0' 4, running a big city..4 a unique empire... a private r world with a do-not- AWARDS: Shown outside the Festival at Cannes (approved as the official French entry to the Cannes Festival last May, it was withdrawn under pressure from the Franco regime). At the end of the Cannes Festival, a group of Spanish film critics awarded LGEF its newly-inaugu- rated Prix Luis Bunuel. It also received the International Film Critics' Prize (Federation Internationale de la Presse Cinematographic) at Cannes. The "French Oscars" of the French Academy (L'Academie du Cinema) were awarded to Resnais for "the best film of the year" and to Yves Montand for "the best performance." Shown at the non-competitive 4th New York Film Festival, 1966. Directed by ALAIN RESNAIS Starring YVES MONTAND@" INGRID THULIN and introducing GENEVIEVE BUJOLD Produced by SOFRACIMA/PARIS-EUROPA FILM, STOCKHOLM/A BRANDON FILMS RELEASE Spring Concert,- SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1967 HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS ON SALE i . . .. . I I I I