PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY RA MM MAY, M! 1H'l UlLJ CORE DIRECTOR: Racial Fight To Continue' Two Professors TO Aid WELL-OILED TOPIC: India School's Planning Cheating Surveys Increase By MARK KILLINGSWORTH Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-"We've near- ly hit pay dirt in our fight for freedom," James Farmer, national director of the National Congress of Racial Equality, said yester- day in ,an interview, "but our fight for equality is going to take much longer." Farmer indicated that the civil rights movement is shifting from a nearly exclusive preoccupation with rights such as voting and fair housing, and is becoming increas- ingly concerned with opportunities -unemployment most particular- ly. He said he has his doubts about the possibility of organizing the civil rights movement into a so- cial movement. Overstated Case "Bayard Rustin has overstated the case, I think," he said. "The only likely partner we'd have is the labor movement-and with less money, less political power and less membership, we'd certainly be the junior partner." But he added that social goals are becoming increasingly impor- tant to the civil rights movement. "Urban renewal often means Negro removal," he charged, de- claring that in such a process the Negro is simply taken out of a city altogether. "For some reason, the major freeway in any city is always built through the Negro district," he added. Mayor Wagner He also blasted New York's May- or Robert Wagner, who when Far- mer suggested to him in April 1964 that the city organize works corps in Harlem to guard against violent riots in the summer, "took it under advisement." "They didn't do anything, and so, in the summer thousands of unemployed young Negroes, frus- trated beyond belief, struck out blindly at the society that couldn't do anything for them. Oh yes, after the riots, the mayor finally did something-they finally had as many as 250 youths working in By LANCE SILVIAN Prof. Authur W. Burks of the philosophy department and Fred- erick R. Suppe of the philosophy department will spend the next two years in India aiding in the development of the Indian In- stitute of Technology. Burks and Suppe will serve on' the American Advisory Committee as aids in developing a curriculum to be centered around programs in humanities and communication sciences. Both men will also teach courses at the Institute. Suppe will work on the development of the logic, philosophy and com- munication sciences divisions of the Institute's library. The Indian Institute of Tech- nology was established in 1960. A group of nine universities includ- ing the University, Princeton Uni- versity, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Cali- fornia, California Institute of Technology, Purdue University and Ohio State University are provid- ing the assistance in building the Institute, as part of the United States government's Aid in Inter- national Development program under the direction of Education- al Services, Inc. The Institute will graduate its first class next October. The pro- gram for the undergraduate de- gree requires five years of study. When completed in 1970, the Institute will have an enrollment capacity for 2,400 undergraduate students and 600 graduate stu-. dents with 300 faculty members. "I feel that I am in a position to help develop the Indian In- stitute of Technology," said Burks, "I also want the experience of living in Indian." The Week To Come SATURDAY, MAY 15 1 p.m.-The national teach-in will be broadcast from Washing- ton in Aud. A. A 90-minute local Collegiate Press Service Since time immemorial cheating has provided a perennial source of campus controversy and indigna- tion. Often used as an index of academic excellence and serious- ness of approach, nothing provides grist for the editorial mill quite as well as a local incident of cheating. And editorial writers have had a field day with the highly pub- licized scandal at the Air Force Academy. There is hardly a cam- pus that hasn't analyzed the Aca- demy situation in terms of local underestimate the proportion of students who have cheated; they tend to believe that only half as many have cheated as their self- ;reports indicate." tit, as Columbia reported, half of the students interviewed in its survey admitted to cheating, what stopped half of them from cheat- ing on the survey?) In any case, school administra- tors have read the report and are 1 i t i 1 JAMES FARMER, national director of CORE, has been in East Lansing, Mich., to organize civil rights movements, concentrating on racial discrimination in housing. Harlem late in the summer," he said. Farmer applauded the War on Poverty as "a noble idea," but added he agreed with criticisms of it voiced by Harlem Congress- man Adam Clayton Powell (D- NY) and Manhattan Congressman William Fitts Ryan (D-NY). No Participation They maintain that poverty plans of many cities, notably New York, Chicago and Boston, have been planned without any real participation by the indigenous poor, as required by the poverty act. "It's one o fthe few times I've agreed with Powell," Farmer said. He also indicated agreement with a questioner who had suggested it would not be realistic to ex- pect "city hall to help organize the poor, which is essentially pro- viding them with a way of fight- ing city hall." CORE, Farmer noted, has al- ready moved .into organizing the poor. It has moved its headquar- ters into "the deepest part of the ghetto areas (in most major ci- ties)" and is also recruiting lead- ers'there. Dial 662-6264 SHOWS START AT 1 :10-3:30-6:15 & 8:50 Commenting on the civil rights fight, in general, Farmer declared, "If you're a bystander you sure aren't innocent." Turning to the civil rights fight in the South, Farmer indicated concern at the situation in tense Bogalusa, La. "The area there is so thorough- ly dominated by the Klan," Far- mer asserted, "that the Negroes there have had to organize for self defense. Now, If the Klan shoots at them, their organization, the Beacons for Defense and Jus- tice, shoots back." discussion will be held following cheating incidents and scores of the broadcast. Before the broad- papers have carried out cheating- cast is received locally, Prof. An- on-campus surveys to document drew Colliver of the sociology the prevalence of the practice at department will deliver an intro- their own schools. ductory speech at 12:30. The Faculty Administration on 7 and 9 p.m'-The Cinema Guild Student Conduct at University of will present "The Kid" with California at Los Angeles, and the Charlie Chaplin and two shorts Honor Court of the University of "Bear Country" and "Calder's South Carolina, suspended stu- Circus" in the Architecture Aud. dents for allowing substitutes to FRIDAY, MAY 22 take their final exams. At the 7 and 9 p.m.-The Cinema Guild University of Massachusetts, a will present "The Great Dictator" student arranged for a grade with Charlie Chaplin and Paulette change on his record in the school Goddard in the Architecture Aud. office. He was caught and sus- pended for "conduct unbecoming TUESDAY, MAY -8 1 a student." An office clerk also 4:10 p.m.-George H. Ford of resigned.# the University of Rochester will Were these isolated cases? Not speak on "Three Stories by D. H. according to the pollsters. The Lawrence" in Aud. A. major survey was conducted by WEDNESDAY, MAY 19 William J. Bowers of Columbia 8:45 a.m.-The School of Public University's bureau of applied so-: Health will sponsor a lecture, "The cial research, under a grant fromt Education of the Diabetic Child the cooperative research press ofc and His Family" in 3042 PH Bldg. the United States Office of Edu- I acting. Many have lashed out with studies of their own. UCLA. re- porting "18 to 20 cases of cheat- ing last semester," commissioned four campus committees to in- vestigate the "cases and causes." Not everyone, however, agrees that cheating is spreading. The University of Texas, which suf- fered cheating scandals in 19471 and 1959, now is able to report in The Daily Texan that, "although cheating has caused embarrass- ment at the University several times, campus authorities agree that student attitudes toward scholastic dishonesty are improv- ing and maturing." Not only their attitudes, but also their techniques seem to be improving-The Harvard Crim- son reported on the current methods in Cambridge, among them the various ways to sub- stitute bogus exam blue books written in class with well re- searched blue books written after class. One such switch was accom- plished by a student who wrote a letter in class to his mother ("I've finished 'my exam and I thought I'd drop you a line.") in a blue book, handed it in, then went to'" the library to write the exam it- self, which he mailed to his mother. The "mistake" was rec- tified, and the grade was excellent. Such ingenuity gave birth this February to an enterprising pro- duct entry into the cheating in- dustry. A Seattle insurance ad- juster announced the sale of a new study aid, the PockeTutor, which was to sell for $19.95 and be a "truly dramatic breakthrough in easier learning." Muehl Dies John F. Muehl, a lecturer in the department of English, was found dead Monday at his cottage in Livingston County. Muehl taught creative writing at the University and had written several books about India where he had lived for some time. rfDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .}o. " ....... v:.i.............. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . c........ .:}7i : .......... :......... r........:"."..t": r.....:v: w :;:vvs::":: :::.::.v:..... ::::...............n.":.}"}:}:".".":..r:"?i:::::::. w5r.:....... .......:".t.":... ., cation. Bowers found that the amount of academic dishonesty in college is "grossly underestimated" by ; t DIAL 8-6416 "A hypnotic, engrossing film!" --Crowther, N. Y. Times A CINEMA MASTERPIECE! A powerful, luminous. and violent existential thriller! - Time Maanne The Daily Official Bulletin as an official publication of The Univer- siti of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRI1TTEN 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. SATURDAY, MAY 15 Day Calendar Continuing Legal Education Young Lawyers' Seminar-Rackham Bldg., 9 a.m. High School French Horn Clinic En- semble-Registration, Hill Aud., 9 a.m. Cinema Guild Program: Architecture Aud., 50c, Sat.. May 15, 7 and 9 p.m.: "The Kid," Charlie Chaplin, Jackie Coogan. Shorts: "Bear Country" and ORGANIZATION NOTICES General NoticesI School of Natural Resources and De- partments of Zoology and Psychology Lecture: G. P. Baerends, University of Groningen, Holland, "An Ethological Analysis of Animal Behavior," 182 P-A Bldg., Mon., May 17, 4 p~m.I The Rare Book Room in the General Library will be closed for renovation from Mon., May X17, through Mon., May 24. If the staff cannot be reached by telephone, messages may be left in the University Library Acquisitions De- partment, Room 106 General Library, 764-9370. Dept. of English Language and Lit- erature Lecture: George H. Ford, bept. of English, University of Rochester, "Three Stories by D. H. Lawrence: Odour of Chrysanthemums, The Prus- sian Officier, and The Man Who Loved Islands," Tues., May 18, Aud. A, Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Placement ANNOUNCEMENTS: U.S. Public Health Service, Detroit -- John Andrews will Interview seniors & grad students Wed., May '19 for Public Health Program Repres. Degrees in Gen. Lib. Arts, Joun., Public Health, Speech, etc. Positions located in most, large U.S. cities. Please call 764-7460, Bureau of Appointments for appoitment. Summer Volunter Program - "Head Start"-Students to assist teachers & soc. workers in neighborhood centers in 8 weeks' program to widen exper. of i school. Check with local Board of Edu-1 cation or write to Volunteers, Projectf Head Start, Office of Econ. Opportuni- ty, Wash., D.C., 20506.l POSITION OPENINGS:1 Whirlpool Corp., Research Labs., St. Joseph, Mich.-1. Research Economist, MA econ., statistics or rel. (econo- metric emphasis) plus 5-10 yrs. exper. ,2. Engra. (Mech. & Chem). R. & D. in absofption refrig. systems. All degree levels plus 2-10 yrs. exper. Equitable Life Ascsurance Society, Detroit-Sales Repres. Grad with sales exper., age 30-45. Midwest Shoe Mfr.-Ass't. to Corpor- ate Counsel. Law grad, top % of class. Recent grad or 2-10 yrs. corp. exper. Perform gen. services for international mfg. & retail concern. State of Wisconsin - Employment Counselor. BA psych., personnel ad- min., educ., soc. science plus 15 hrs. vocat. guid. plus 2 yrs. exper.; or MA & 1 yr. exper. Application deadline June 4. State of Washington, Olympia-Vari- bus positions iiciuding artist illustra- tor, legal secretary & personnel offi- cer Also 1 Acctg. Analysts. BBA min;: students, student body presidents, and deans.. The report claimed that, -two and a half times as many students have cheated as student body presidents estimate, and more than three times as many have cheated as deans es- timate. Even students themselves YOU CAN EARN UP TO 14 HOURS OF COLLEGE CREDIT WHILE STUDYING THIS SUMMER IN THE NATION'S CAPITAL AT THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY A program designed to make the unparalleled resources of Washington, D.C. available to students in other colleges and universities. 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S* * Lutheran Student Chapel (National Lutheran Council), Worship, May 16, 11 a.m., Sunday cvening program, - Man-"Bound or Free or Both," spon- sored by Ecumenical Campus Staff, 7 p.m., Lutheran Student Chapel, Hill and Forest. "Calder's Circus'. * * * For further information, please 764-7480, General Div., Bureau of call Ap- very young children just beginning pointments, 3200 SAB.+ GROOM E'S BATHING BEACH SAFEST BEACH in Southern Michiganh Refreshment Center Ice Cream - Sandwiches Soft Drinks Complete Line of Bathing Suits for Sale 10 Miles North of Ann Arbor via U S 23 Whitmore Lake, Michigan I write for catalogue: Dean of the Summer Sessions The George Washington University Washington, D.C. 20006 (~ (*Pick up your vacation supply of Pon- guins at your college bookstore soon. ' .f. Penguins flourish in any environment, so take them wherever you go this summer-home, traveling, or back t. school. -tPENGUIN t M 03 Y - aZ Agt;.. ,..L.. ,.... 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