PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAIL wv.nvp.qnAV- TWAV K. 14199 Y LL;1t.'QTAY7 UMAX 5,19 3 RESTON ADDRESSES GRADUATES: Urges Dedication of Life to Peace MONTHLY MEETING: Regents Make Appointments By ROBERT HIPPLER Co-Editor Speaking at the University's commencement, New York Times Associate Editor James Reston last Saturday urged the graduating classes to abandon a life domi- nated by materialism for one dedicated to increasing the chanc- es for peace in the world. "Your help is needed in public service, in teaching, in making our cities and our country slums a more hopeful place,"' he said. Reston said that "the problem of many generations before yours has been that the average man felt helpless before the great ques- tions of the day. This is not true today." He emphasized that there is now a vast army of Americans working to better the world, con- sisting not only of diplomats and. journalists and doctors out in the world, but also of those who teach and those "retraining the aband- oned generation in Appalachia or bringing clean water to the vil- lages of Africa and Latin Amer- ica." Critical Point Reston was critical of commer- cial and material, emphasis in American life, asserting thats"the broad commercial superhighways ... bypass everything, including, I sometimes think, life itself." "The happiest men and women I know are not those who are providing the material things that clutter up our lives and dull our minds, or even those who escape from the struggle, but those who are engaged in the tasks that nourish and elevate the human spirit." Reston promised the graduating classes that they would face a more complicated and often more frustrating world than that en- countered by their ancestors--but. one which would offer them an unprecedented vista of choice. "It will be a highly interde- so many useful things to be done pendent world. . . we will have to and so many opportunities for learn a lot more than we now young people to do them," Reston know about the languages and the said. natures of men and women inW other parts of the world," he said. World Challenge' w He added that. the nation will Reston predicted that the rest face complicated and challenging of the century would bring "stren- situations in the years ahead. The uous intellectual competition for a challenge of worldwide revolution person and even more for his " and Communism "confronts every- children; therefore if one wants to w .f A CAMPUS FASHION WHICH GIRLS WILL LOVE keep up rather than giving up, education will have to be a life- time process." Life in coming years will con- tain considerable frustrations, he said. For one thing, personal pri- vacy will be at a premium. "It will be an increasingly crowded world ... the need for privacy wil have to be sought and protected, even more" in the future genera- tion. Government Role High taxation and the cost of government, in addition, will mean that "a life devoted primar- ily to the acquisition of material things is likely to make even less sense in the last quarter of this century than it did before." Despite the problems the grad- uates will face, "I have not come here to be depressing or pity- ing," Reston said. He noted that the previous two American gen- erations had graduated in yearsj when the last two world wars were just getting underway-1915 and 1940. In addition, this "may be the first American generation in a hundred years with no personal memory of either a great war or a great depression." This generation of graduates confronts a world that presents problems, but "seldom, if ever, has there been a time when there were, ne wa a , care Ju pro iem of analysis if we are to reach sound judgments." In this context, Reston focused criticism on recent teach-ins. He explained that he had been "bom- barded" with protests from stu- dents for commentingthat the teach-ins seemed to him more like demonstrations than debates. He explained that the teach- ins, while serving as excellent for- ums for interested persons, in- his opinion limited their usefulness by eliminating grounds for discussion of complicated problems. OLD WAYS DON'T W OR A memorial service will be held for Prof. Paul M. Fitts of the psychology department who died of a heart attack Sunday. The service will be held at 2 p.m. at the Unitarian Church today. Fitts was serving as a consultant to the President's Science Ad- visory Committee and as presi- dent of the Human Factors Society at the time of his death. K:I, FITTS DIES iFormulate New Method A: din litt pro J. O bein T; tim go tion The Circle Pin From 2.95-6.95, gold filled and sterling. (Engraved at no extra cost) at The Week]ACaps A Capu I BAY S arcade jewelry shop 16 Nickels Arcade-off State St. THURSDAY, MAY 6 8 p.m.-Crest will sponsor a travel lecture in Aud. A. 8:30 p.m. - The Philadelphia Orchestra under the direction of Eugene Ormandy and featuring soprano Leontyne Price will per- form in Hill Aud. This is one of the May Festival Concerts. FRIDAY, MAY 7 8:30 p.m. - The Philadelphia Orchestra, under the direction of Thor Johnson, and the University Irish her the best Give her the finest... for Mother's Day SUNDAY, MAY 9th Please your Mother on this special Sunday with the lovely Russell Stover GiftBox. Appropriately adorned with pink carnations, it contains Assorted Chocolates and Butter Bons-the finest, freshest candies sold. 112 lb. box $2.40 2'% lb. box $3.50 Assorted Chocolates at $1.60 a pound CHESTER ROBERTS 1203 South University 312 South State "the sweetest spot in town" Ch per be Ma Mu Bru. qua 2 Orc Wil Hill Ros 8 Orc dire feat Hill 2 Ore Tho ion' reen Dic Aud I TRAVEL INC. AIRLINE STEAMSHIP HOTEL CALL 665-3734 IN THE MAYNARD HOUSE To Enforce Litter-Law knn Arbor's anti-littering or- warrant issued by the Municiple ance will be tougher when a Court in order to enforce the or- ering violation ticket is ap- dinance. ved by Municiple Judge Francis Under Ann Arbor's littering or- Y'Brien. The ticket form is now dinance an offender can receive a ng prepared. maximum penalty of 90 days in he ticket will eliminate the jail and a fine of up to $100. e consuming activity officers The law on litter not only ap- through to obtain authoriza- plies to public property, but to i from the city attorney for a private dwellings as well. The law reads that "the duty of every owner of property to maintain his premises in a clean condition" [0 Com e and not to permit garbage, rub- bish or other wastes to accumu- late so as to create a hazard to According to the city's clean up chairman dozens of apartment oral Union Youth Chorus will owners in Ann Arbor are guilty of form in Hill Aud. Featured will violating the law by failing to pro- Janice Harsanyi, soprano, vide adequate garbage contain- ureen Forrester, contralto, ers. Tenants who create the rray Dickie, tenor, Anshel messes are also indicted for fail- silow, violin, Joseph De Pas- ing to obey the anti-littering or- le, viola. dinance. SATURDAY, MAY 8 Police have also received sev- :30 p.m. - The Philadelphia eral calls recently about rubbish hestra under the direction of trucks which scatter their con- liam Smith will perform in tents on roads and sidewalks as IAud. Featured will be Leonard they are driven to a dump. This e, violincellist. action also is a violation of the :30 p.m. - The Philadelphia litter law and drivers can be hestra will perform under the prosecuted. ection of Eugene Ormandy and Another reason the police are Luring Cesare Siepi, bass, in having difficulty enforcing the Aud" law is that handbill peddlers SUNDAY, MAY 9 sometimes violate the law. :30 p.m. - The Philadelphia The ordinance says handbills hestra under the direction of must be handed to an occupant or r Johnson and the Choral Un- owner of a house and cannot be Youth Chorus featuring Mau- stuck in doorways or dropped on i Forrester, contralto, Murray porches. kie, tenor will perform in Hill . . Evacuate Band BE SHE'LL DIE LAUGHING! To Pu t R ToPuerto nico RNA LISI SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - The University jazz band arrived in U San Juan yesterday and after being evacuated from the Domin- ER ican Republic yesterday. The band was aboard one of the IFE United States warships that are .TED ARTISTS evacuating some 1000 American, British, Canadian and Jamaican N DIAL nationals from the republic. } 5-629u Dean James Wallace of the mu- sic :school said that an embassy official told him the band stayed in their hotel rooms when rioting broke out in Santo Domingo. Wallace said there was some in- as/ dication band members might1 have had to leave their instru- ments behind :in the Dominican Republic. He said that it was hoped a charterflight could be arranged to take the band to Ja- maica,. the next scheduled stop on its 100-day Latin American con- cert tour. The band returns from its tour on Sunday. Two new department chairmen were appointed by the Regents at their regular monthly meeting Friday. Prof. William B. Willcox was named chairman of the history department and Prof. H. R. Crane was named chairman of the physics department. The appointments are effective July 1 and continue for five years. Wilcox replaces Prof. John Bow- ditch, chairman for the past five years, who had asked to be re- lieved of his administrative duties so as to have more time for scholarly pursuits. Previous Experience After receiving a PhD at 'Yale University in 1936, Wilcox taught at Williams College until coming to the University. He has served as acting chairman of the de- partment twice. Wilcox's work in teaching and research was recognized in 1945 when he was the recipient of the Henry Russel Award. He also serv- ed as a Fulbright lecturer at Ox- ford University from 1957 to 1958, was a visiting associate professor at the University of Chicago in 1949, and was a member of the Institute of Advanced Study in 1946 and 1947. Crane replaces Prof. David Den- nison, who has been chairman of the physics department for the past ten years. Dennison asked that he be relieved of the re- sponsibility so that he may give more attention to scholarly and writing duties,, After receiving his degree at California Institute of Technology in 1934, Crane joined the physics department as an instructor. He rose to the rank of professor in 1946 after various assignments at the Radiation Laboratory of MIT and at Carnegie Institute of Washington during the war years: Widely Recognized He is widely recognized for his work on a variety of physical problems and known for his pio- neering work in the development of electron accelerators and their use for measuring particle mo- bilities. The Regents also renamed two departmental chairmen. Prof. Wil- liam M. Sattler was reappointed to the speech department and Prof. Clarence K. Pott was re- appointed to the Germanic lan- guages and literatures department. Appointments The Regents also made the fol- lowing appointments at their meeting. Robert W. Adams as professor of international business, effec- tive July 1. He is manager of the general economics department of Standard Oil Co. Engineering William J. Anderson as assis- tant professorf of aeronautical and astronautical engineering, ef- fective this September. He is at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. Elmer G. Berry as professor of zoology and curator of mollusks in the Musem of Zoology, effective June 1. He is a scientist director in the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md. Donald E. Cleveland as associate professor of civil engineering, ef- fective with the 1965-66 University year. He is on the facaulty of Texas A. & M. Paula Eldot as assistant pro- fessor of history, Dearborn Cam- pus, effective fall term. She is at the City College of New York. Spanish Charles F. Fraker as assistant professor of Spanish, effective fall term. He is on the faculty at Wesleyan University. John J. Hanlon as adjunct pro- fessor of public health adminis- tration, effective April 1. He is Detroit commissioner of health and he will serve the University part-time. Elton D. Higgs as assistant pro- fessor of English, Dearborn Camp pus, effective fall term. He is to receive his PhD degree from the University of Pittsburgh this, year. John W. Kingdon as assistant professor of political science, ef- fective this September. He is com- pleting PhD requirements at the University of Wisconsin. Law Robert N. Leavell as visiting professor of law, effective in August. He is now professor of lawI at the University of Georgia. Marlyn E. Lugar as visiting professor of law, effective in August. He is professor of law at West Virginia University. Robert I. Magnusson as visiting associate professor of electrical engineering, effective in August. He is a professor of applied elec- tronics at the Chalmers University of Technology, Goteborg, Sweden. Robert A. 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