THE MICHIGAN DAILY Eastern Language Studies ts Students ccelerate LiguisticSkill lor, or Mr. Russell 0. Hanson, as- By SHERI BRISTOL - MODERN LIVING--Sliding glass walls provide access to a sheltered patio at the new Alpha Chi Omega sorority house on Washtenaw. Living, dining and recreation rooms may be combined with the outdoor area for special events. The patio was designed to save a large tree in the center of the property, which was formerly the site of the Alice Lloyd home. At present the living-dining areas of the new house are unfinished. New Sorority House To 0 By PAT GOLDEN The new Alpha Chi Omega Sorority house at 1735 Washtenaw will be ready for occupancy this term, but barely. The 67 girls who will live in the house will not be able to move in until Sunday, Sept. 18. By then bedrooms and plumbing facilities will be completed. Living and cooking areas of the house may not be ready for some time, however. According to Mrs. Marie Netting, housemother, ar- rangements may be made for the girls to board at other sorority houses if the kitchen is not finish- ed immediately. "I hope this situa- tion doesn't last very long, be- cause it will cost the sorority much more to board the girls out than to feed them at the house," she observed. The main portion of the $365,- 000 house is the three story struc- ture in the rear which contains the bedrooms, kitchen, dining room and recreation room. A wide hallway connects this area with the one story li t ig room and music room. A sheltered patio formed by the angles of the two main areas may be reach- ed from either wing by sliding glass doors. The whole living area of living room, patio, dining room and recreation room can thus be made one huge room. Landscaping for the house has been donated by parents. Fathers of the girls spent a Sunday pre- paring the lawn for seeding. They 1pen Sunday will meet again this fall tb put in shrubbery. The exterior of the house is beige brick, accented by a tur- quoise door and, black wrought iron Greek letters. Both the living room and rec- reation room have fireplaces. A snack bar is included in the rec- reation room, but money for fur- niture is not yet available. The sorority's Mothers Club hopes to raise money for that purpose this year, "Most of the Chinese and Japan- ese languages are being taken by undergraduate as well as ;radu- ate students so that they gain language competence at earlier stages than ever before," Prof. Joseph K. Yamagiwa of the Far, Eastern studies and language de- partment said. "The National Defense Educa- tion Act provides some dozen stu- dent fellows in Japanese and Chi- nese. And the United States OfficeI of Education has provided a matching fund which supports the expansion in our teaching staff." The Department of Far Eastern Studies has hired two new profes- sors of Japanese. Prof. Hiroshi Tsukishima from Tokyo University and Prof. Keiji Inaga from Hiro- shima University will be teaching Japanese courses. Members on Leave "Three members of the staff on the Chinese side are on leave so we have sought replacements," Prof. Yamagiwa said. "Two new ap- pointments to the staff are Miss Li-Chi from the University of California and Miss Helen W. Kao who has been an assistant editor of our Middle English Dictionary for some time." The U. S. Office of Education has also provided a research grant to the department. "It will permit us to undertake two projects," Yamagiwa continued. "The first is the preparation of advanced reading material on Japanese his- tory, political science, literature, language, and anthropology. "The second is the preparation of an area manual on Japan. It will be a text book with possibly eleven sections on different seg- ments of Japanese culture." This manual will be produced by Prof. Richard K. 1eardsley of the an- thropology department and Prof. John W. Hall from the history department. Near Eastern Studies There have been several changes in the Near Eastern department as well. Prof. George G. Cameron said, "One thing which is worth mentioning is the extraordinary attendance this summer. There were 91 students intensively study- ing Arabic, Persian and Turkish, and in courses requiring 25 hours a week of classes." A group of eight went to Moscow this summer to take part in the International Congress of Orien- talists which was held from the seventh through the seventeenth of August. "Head of the delegation was Regent Eugene Power. One of his objectives was to secure micro- Ilms of books and articles which are unobtainable in the United States for a language and history system." The department staff will be short two men this year. Oleg Gra- bar, who was professor of Art His- tory, will be director of Jerusalem School. Associate Professor An- drew Ehrenkreutz will study abroad under an American Coun- sel of Learned Societies Fellowship. New Members However, two new members have been added to the staff and two men who have been abroad have returned to the University. Prof. Robert Landen will teach modern Near Eastern history. In charge of library materials will be Prof. Ee- ozer Birnbaum. He has come from Durham University in England. Prof. Herbert H. Paper has just returned from England where he has been studying under a ul- bright Scholarship at Cambridge. He will be a key figure in an ex- tensive research program which will study languages of the Near and Middle East. Nearly a quarter of a million dollars have been supplied for the Oirogram under the two-year Na- tiomal Defense Education Act con- tract. Under the direction of Prof. Cameron the researchers will work to develop instructional materials for training Americans in langu- ages of the Near East. They will concentrate on four languages; Arabic, Persian. Kur- dish, a language spoken in South- em Asia and Turkey, Northern Iran and Iraq, and Pashto, which is spoken in Afghanistan and Pak- istan. Work on Proga Working on the program with Cameron and Paper will be Prof. Herbert Penzl of the German de- partment and Prof. 0. L. Chavar- ria-Aguilar. They are the only known pair of Americans to ever undertake serious linguistic work in Pashto. A fifth man, Prof. Ernest N. Mc- Carus is also returning to take part in the research program. For the past two years he has served as director of the Foreign Service Institute's Language School in Bei- rut, Lebanon. Study Grants Now Available To Graduates Applications for Fulbright schol- arships for graduate study or re- search will be accepted until Nov. 1. the Institute of International Education has announced. Approximately 800 scholarships are available for studyeIn30 coun- tries. The grants include tuition, maintenance and round-trip trav- el. E Inter-American Cultural Con- vention awards for study in 17 Latin American countries have the same filing deadline. They cover transportation, tuition and par- tial maintenance costs. Both stu- dent programs are administered by the Institute of International Education for the Statp Depar- ment. Applicants for both awards must be U.S. citizens at the thme of application, must have a bach- elor's degree or the equivalent by 1961, and must have a knowledge of the language of the host coun- try. A demonstrated capacity for independent study and a good academic record are also expected. They will submit a plan of pro- posed study that can be carried out profitably within the year abroad. Successful candidates are required to affiliate with approved institutions of higher learning abroad. Prefe ence is given to applicants under 35 years of age who have not previously lived or studied abroad. Swingline tape no bigger. than a pack of gum! I ride GO-KARTS for thrills at 980 E. Michigan, Ypsilanti R _ I I 1 l U -Daily--James warneka WHERE'S MY BED?--Betsy Conn, '63, sits on the floor of her empty room in the new sorority house., She and her sisters will not be able to move in until Sunday. Betsy fMund one consolation in seeing the room without-any furniture: it will probably never be that clean again. BIKES 199 NEW BIKE POPULAR 4195 1 s I r i i ! f i i i I t Ih } i i y t 4 y New and Used TEXTBOOKS "Every Book for Every Course" STUDENT SUPPLIES Bargains in COMPLETE PARTS INVENTORY I2 Including 1000 Staples A do-it-yourself kit in the palm of your hand! Unconditionally guar- anteed, Tot makes book covers, fastens papers, does arts and crafts work, mends, tacks...no end of uses! Buy it at your college book store.' ammi I "Whatever you need for your bike" ® - m, - -® m Ant