TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1965 THlE MICHIIGAN D1AILYV - PREVENT CONG RAIDS: Marines Strengthen Has Today's English Teaching Faile Viet Base PAGE THREE d?I By The Associated Press DA NANG, Viet Nam-United States Marine riflemen moved yesterday to close a ring of steel around the DaNang air base, where construction crews are ex- panding the huge base. Leathernecks in new, light weight fiber glass helmets and laden with weapons and ammuni- tion took over positions south of the base. They hoped to seal off a route used by Viet Cong guerrillas in a hit-and-run raid July 1. The area previously was guard- ed by Vietnamese troops. Intelligence Reports Intelligence reports indicated World News Roind up By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Senate passed late yesterday a "cold war G.I. Bill of Rights" measure pro- viding monthly educational allow- ances and loan benefits to post- Korean veterans. The vote was 69-17. * * * PASADENA, Calif.-Mariner 4 was radioing yesterday what may be some of its most interesting pictures of Mars-electronic im- ages of areas some scientists think could be vegetation-but there was no hint of when they would be released. BUCHAREST, Romania - Ro- manian Communist party chief Nicolae Ceausescu called on the Soviet and Chinese Communist parties yesterday to make a "sin- cere aid comradely" new effort to settle their long-seething conflict. HONOLULU - Syngman Rhee, 90, founder and first president of the Korean republic, died in exile yesterday in Honolulu, his dream of spending his last days in his own country, unfulfilled. BERLIN-At least one East Ger- man helicopter hovered over Ber- lin yesterday in defiance of four- power air agreements, West Berlin customs officers reported. They spotted the craft on the East Berlin side of the border in the city's Kreuzberg section along the Spree river. Another Cora- munist helicopter was sighted by the customs men, but they could not say whether it was East Ger- man or Russian. that, even as the recently rein- forced Marines moved into their new positions, the guerrillas con- tinued to build up their own forces in the rice paddies and wooded areas to the south. There was speculation seven or more Viet Cong battalions may now be operating within 15 miles of Da Nang. That could mean 2,800 or more men. Informed military sources said the prospects are that the Viet Cong might still be able to in- filtrate the base to plant bombs, but that a successful major as- sault was less likely. President Ho Chi Minh of North Viet Nam vowed yesterday that his people would fight another 20 years or more if necessary to achieve final victory. Broadcast In a double-barreled statement broadcast by radio Hanoi, Ho call- ed on Americans to end the 'ag- gressive war" of their government and on the South Vietnamese sol- diers and government to cease what he called their slavish sub- servience to the United States. He issued the appeals in con- nection with the 11th anniversary tomorrow of the Geneva agree- ments ending French colonial rule in Indochina and creating North and South Viet Nam. He again implicitly ruled out peace talks on Viet Nam on any but his terms. These include the immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops. Shot Down It was announced a U.S. Navy A6 Intruder was shot down Sun- day a short time after Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara Ask Court To Restrain Klan BOGALUSA, La. (P)-A federal court was asked yesterday to hold this city's top police officials in contempt and enjoin the Ku Klux Klan from interfering with civil rights demonstrations. John Doar, justice department official sent as a White House troubleshooter filed legal actions in federal district court at New Orleans-65 miles southeast of this troubled papermill town. He asked that public safety commissioner Arnold Spiers and police chief Claxton Knight be held in both civil and criminal contempt. Doar is an assistant attorney general in charge of the justice department's civil rights division. The twin legal moves came as civil rights workers pushed ahead with picketing and street demon- strations, actions that have pro- duced frequent racial clashes in recent weeks.f A march yesterday was the 17th I in a series that began last January with the testing of public accom- modations. The marchers are de- manding equal job opportunities for Negroes and desegregation of public facilities. DIAL 8-6416 watched the big jet and 13 other planes catapulted from the 7th fleet carrier Independence for an attack on port facilities at Ham Rong, 85 miles south of Hanoi. A spokesman said the two crew- man parachuted to land, but a search and rescue operation fail- ed to locate them and its was presumed both were captured. Re- turning pilots said antiaircraft fire was very heavy, but they de- stroyed a number of buildings with bombs and rockets. Rail Link A railway link between China and North Viet Nam-the Kun- ming-Hanoi line-was the target of three attacks by U.S. air force pilots. The deepest penetration of the campaign was made by four U.S. Air Force F105 Thunderchiefs, a spokesman announced. T h e y bombed the tracks northwestward from a point 90 miles from Hanoi. The Viet Cong killed three Americans and wounded several in their overnight attack on newly arrived elements of the 1st in- fantry division near the Bien Hoa air base, a U.S. spokesman said yesterday. The guerrillas struck under cover of a torrential rain. They opened up with a motar barrage, then moved in infiltrators. The infantrymen shot back. Helicop- ters strafed suspected Viet Cong positions until the action died in midmorning. Viet Cong casualties, if any, were not determined. By ROBERT MOORE "The teaching of English has failed to come to grips with the type of wisdom that people need," publisher - educator William D. Boutwell said yesterday, in a speech before an English teach- ers' conference here. Boutwell was recently named the Outstanding Contributor to the Teaching of English by a na- tional English education group, and, as vice-president of Scholas- tic Magazines, initiated the suc- cessful Teen-Age Book Club. The province of education is wisdom, he began, and in to- day's world English teachers are not taking the best way to pre- sent students with the wisdom that exists in literature. Evidence Boutwell pointed to evidence that the public's attitude toward literature has drastically changed. "The stock-in-trade of English is fiction," he said. "But nowa- days, fiction is little sought and very little trusted." On Broadway, he said, not a single new serious play was pro- duced during one recent year. Books-except for paperbacks- sell little, and non-fiction outsells fiction, he said. Most classics, Boutwell said, are unpopular because they aren't written in today's language, but in a language "that hasn't been standard American since the twenties." "Poetry," he added, "has al- most lost its audience." Real Need But there is still a real need for literature today, Boutwell said. "I invite English teachers to dig into the problems of mass com- munication, to the problems of people who try for light and wisdom, to the problems whose solutions can come from English classes more than from any other class in the curriculum. English teachers should relate their readings in class to reality -to the problems that students face, Boutwell said. He pointed to the problems of racial discrimination, of divorce and separation, of cybernation and of inter-personal relations as issues which literature could help explain. One sign of the failure of Eng- lish teaching, he said, is shown by simple greeting cards. Intelligent Person "Everytime an intelligent per- son passes a card shop," Boutwell said, "he should shudder. People feel so inadequate to express their feelings that-like illiterate Asians -they have to have a professional writer come in phrase them for him." Another indication of the fail- ure is in bad television shows, he said. "College graduates should be picketing Madison Avenue, ask- ing for good television shows," in- stead of merely not watching the, HO CHI MINH The Week To Come: a Campus Calendar William A TUESDAY, JULY 20 12:00 m.-The Office of Relig- ious Affairs will present a book discussion with Sister Zoe Barry, O.S.B. on Teilhard de Chardin's "The Phenomenon of Man" in Anderson Room D, Michigan Union. 1:30 p.m.-The Audio-Visual education center will present a film preview entitled "Woodrow Nilson" in the Multipurpose Room of the UGLI. 7:30 p.m.-The Linguistic In- stitute Forum-Lecture will present H. A. Gleason, Jr. on "Writing Systems-their Form and Place" in the Natural Science Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The University Musi- cal Society Summer Concert Series will present Philippe Entremont, pianist in Rackham Aud. WEDNESDAY, JULY 21 1:30 p.m.-The Audio-Visual education center will present a film preview entitled "Wild Highlands and Scotland" in the Multipurpose room of the UGLI. 8:00 p.m.-The Department of Speech and the University Players will present Peter Shaffer's "The Private Ear and The Public Eye" in Mendelssohn Theater. THURSDAY, JULY 22 1:30 p.m.-The Audio-Visual education center will present a film preview entitled "Overture," "T h r e e Grandmothers," and "Children Without" in the Multi- purpose room of the UGLI. 7:30 p.m.-The Linguistic In- stitute Forum Lecture will present John Carroll speaking on "Sub- jective Measurements in Psycho- linguistics" in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall. 8:00 p.m.-The Department of Speech and the University Play- ers will present Peter Shaffer's "The Private Ear and The Public Eye" in Mendelssohn Theater. FRIDAY, JULY 23 1:30 p.m.--The Audio-Visual education center will present a film preview entitled "Arctic Re- gion and its Polar Bears" and "Japan: its Customes and Tra- ditions" in the basement of West Quad. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The Cinemaj Guild will present the Marx Brothers in "Horsefeather" in the Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-The Department of Speech and the University Play- ers will present Peter Shaffer's' "The Private Ear and the Public Eye" in Mendelssohn Theater. SATURDAY, JULY 24 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The Cimema Guild will present the Marx Brothers in "Horsefeathers" in the Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-The Department of Speech and the University Play- ers will present Peter Shafer's "The Private Ear and The Public Eye" in Mendelssohn Theater. bad television shows. "Television," he added, "is the vulgate (people's language) of our day." That it is such a wasteland is a fault of English teachers, who ignore the present and concen- trate on the ideas and media of the past. Sociologists, Sociologists, psychologists, and counselors abound today. "And people trust these more than they trust literature" because the teachers of literature have made I . Boutwell the mistakes as they have, Bout- well said. People also turn to mathematics and the physical sciences for "wis- dom" more than they do to lit- erature, he complained. Boutwell gave an example of his point by reading a selection from a poem by Tennyson that was extremely difficult to under- stand but which concerned the question of the individual's iden- tity in a confusing world-perhaps the most vital question of to- day. .. ...... .......... ....... r...... . . ...1. ."........ :... h.r . ,. .....r..... tf h +441s .114.. r ................ ..... .......... ..... ...a+r.... 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DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .. v a,..r ,n ."..e" ".. ..... .: .......... ...............1............. .,.. ..........:... _............ ............... .. .r.. ......,, . ,.... r.: " yJ."s ... x:." :a",ir:r:Y.tfr . t4 . w::... .. ,... r.. .,.. n ......... .. .............J v. S.4t..":r:xtY::':x:v::....,.:.......'.:::r.S;;.,..,......"::".:::f:.".^.^, .:.. ..Y Y.'.:::;... Y4. . .l ., f. ..:. }.l :"}i7:' ........::...h ..............Y,.,S':114Y."...,".....,..4.......1...4......,.......,"..1..:f:.1M:r:::.",S h........."...yJ...1...,,...,,}....Y.Y~::fJAV::.^.S".4v."J:f.:v::.Y:'{S..Y.SY:.... f.Y....t.4":S1 Mf l .'.'.ti ..... EhneOw CARPENTER ROAD THE AREA'S NEWEST AND FINEST DRIVE IN Box Office Opens at 7:30 ENDS TONIGHT ALL COLOR PROGRAM "GIRLS ON THE BEAC H" Shown at 8:30 Only The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 .p.m. of the day preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. TUESDAY, JULY 20 Day Calendar Center for Programmed Learning for Business Workshop for Programmers - Geary A. Rummier, director, "Use Evaluation, Selection, and Writing of Proframmed Materials": 8:30 a.m., Michigan Union. Doctoral Examination for Richard Earl Corpron, Anatomy; thesis: "The Ul- trastructure of the Gastric Mucosa in Normal and Hypophysectomized Rats," Tues., July 20, 4558 E. Medical Bldg., 3 p.m. Chairman, B. L. Baker, National Band Conductors Conference -Registration, School of Music, 8 a.m. Institute on Urban and Regional An- alysis-Michigan League, 8 a.m. Band Conductors Conference Recita -Harry Berv, French hornist: Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 a.m. Office of Religious Affairs Book Dis- cussion-Sister Zoe Barry, O.S.B., doc- toral candidate, Comparative Literature, "Teilhard's de Chardin's 'The Phe- nomenon of Man' ": Anderson Room D, Michigan Union, 12 m. Band Conductors Conference Recital -Bramwell Smith, trumpeter: Recital Hall, School of Music, 1:30 p.m. Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"Woodrow wilson": Multipur- pose Room, Undergraduate Library, 1:30 p.m. Band Conductors Conference Recital -Bobby Christian, percussionist: Reci- tal Hall, School of Music, 3:45 p.m. Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture - volney Stefflre, departments of psy- chology and sociology, "Language and Behavior": Natural Science Aud., 7:30 p.m. University Musical Society Summe Concert Series Recital-Philippe Entre- mont, pianist: Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m. General Notices French and German Screening Exami- nations: The screening examinations in French and German for Doctoral candi- dates will be administered on Thurs., July 29 from 3-5 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Doctoral candidates must pass the screening examination before taking the written test in French or German, un- less they have received B or better in French 111 or German 111. Those who fail the examination may take it again when the test is administered in Sep- tember. Candidates are asked to bring their own No. 2 pencils. Foreign Visitors The following are the foreign visi- tors programmed through the Interna- tional Center who will be on campus this week on the dates indicated. Pro- gram arrangements are being made by Mrs. Clifford R. Miller, International Center, 764-2148. Miss Kristiina Kivivuori, translator and editor, Oy Weilin & Goos Ab, Hel- sinki, Finland, July 18-24. Ntauhigo Yosida, assistant professor of philosophy, Tokyo Institute of Tech- nology, Tokyo, Japan, July 18-21. Jozef Zawadzki, full professor of high- er economics, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland, July 20. Ten Brazilian student leaders, stu- dent leaders, University of Bahia, Sal- vador, Brazil, July 20-25. Ariyoshi Mizunoe, professor of Eng- lish literature, Saga University, Kyushu, Japan, July 21. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Reg- ular meeting, July 20, Room 3B, Michi- gan Union. Speaker: Marvin Christian- son. Topic: "Christianity in Non-Tra- ditional Terms." BEACH TRIP Sat., July 24 (9-4), Sign up Wed., July 21 (1-4) STUDENT OFFICES 2nd floor Union Sponsored by UAC Andre Charles Thiriet, senior lecturer, University of Dakar, Senegal, July 21- 28. Aimuirovbaek M. Giwa-Osagie, man- aging director, Market Research Ltd., Lagos, Nigeria, July 24-Aug. 21, Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Lake Shore, Inc., Iron Mountain, Mich. -Openings with mfr. of mining, ma- rine & other indust. machinery in- cluding 1. Mech. design engrs., min. 6 yrs. exper. 2. Structural engr., BSCE plus 5 yrs. exper. 3. Structural detail leader, 5 yrs. exper. in steel des. & detailing. Some college desirable. Kordite oCrp., Macedon, N.Y.--Fi- nance & Planning Manager, BS Bus. Ad., MBA pref. plus 3 yrs. exper. in cost & financial analysis. Deere & Co., Moline, II1.-various openings for recent grads including accountants, engrs., programmers. Also 1. Physical chemist. PhD for research. 2. Physicisot, PhD, research. B. F. Goodrich, Akron, Ohio-Sr. Market Res. Analyst, MBA, exper. in statistics & econ 8-10 yrs. as mktg. res. analyst. Age 30-40. Owens-Illinois Tech. Ctr., Toledo, Ohio-1. Analytical Chem., MS Chem., 3-5 yrs. exper. 2. Chem. Engr. BS; dev. & plant operation exper. 3. Chem. BS Org. Chem. 0-5 yrs. exper. Many other tech. job openings also. * * * For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. GRALs\9M IXERt VFW Hall FRIDAY, JULY 23 9-12 P.M. One Dollar Donation 314 E. Liberty Stag or Drag Refreshments TEACHER PLACEMENT: The following schools have vacancies for fall: Howe, Ind. (Howe Military Academy) -H.S. Math. Dearborn Hts., Mich. (Crestwood) - H.S. Spanish, J.H. Vocal Music. * * * For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, Educ. Div., 3200 SAB. 764-7462. AIDEN MIESEN'S BAND Sponsored by Graduate Student Council ENCORE PROGRAM OF TWIN CLASSICS! TODAY 3rd Luncheon Book Discussion THE PHENOMENON OF MAN by Teilhard de Chardin, S.J. SR. ZOE BARRY, O.S.B., will speak in the 3rd of this series. She is a Ph.D. candidate in Comparative Literature at the U. of M. 12:00 Noon-Michigan Union, Anderson Room D DISCUSSION-FREE OF CHARGE (Luncheon available: 50c) Sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs, The University of Michigap Next Tuesday: "Purposes of the University: The University and International Politics" by Prof. William Gamsbn I I JULY SHOE SALE SAVE OVER 50% WOMEN'S SHOES DRESS & WALKING STYLES 1 i DIAL 662-6264 ST.TE "DR. NO" at 1:30-5:20 & 9:20 "FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE" at 3:25 & 7:25 HELD OVER 2nd Week! MID HEELS STACKED HEELS LITTLE HEELS 490 to 690 Double the excitlieent with Double DOUBLEMHOI. Reg. 10.95 to 12.95 White, Bone, Pastels, Spectators-Black, Red, Brown, Pat DRESS FLATS-CASUAL STYLES- ITALIAN SANDALS & THONGS- WASHABLE CASUALS- 99m390.m490 MEN'S SHOES I !I j V Y (,IGr C J 1 1 IC if 3 olulG. II I I I I = ..- in-- - AM --a4iik - % AW i