LwU THE MICHIGAN DAILY JRDAY SYMPOSIUM: r Helens [atchear Cites .Pr~oblems i."Tn. I I n Marking State Growth By MICHAEL HARRAH Special To The Daily RT HURON - "No matter rou deal with the question of state, growth, no one quite eds in keeping up with as- .g it," University President ,n Hatcher observed here day. dressing the second in a ser- ter Talks Attitudes I By SANDRA SANDELL William E. Porter, professor of urnalism at the State University Iowa discussed "Foreign Atti- ides Tpward the United States nd the People-to-People Fallacy" esterday in a speech sponsored y the journalism department. -"rter said that some Americans, % foreign aid policy on the sumption that if people are giv- a things,; they will necessarily ike" the giver. This confusion is due to the ,ilure to differentiate between ie formation of two different nds of attitudes-situational at- tudes and culture-bound atti- .des, Porter continued. Situational attitudes are those hich are due mainly to geograph- al, historical, and economic re- tionships between nations," Por- r said. The change of situational atti- ides depends on the change in ie situation, Porter continued. qo amount of Soviet sweet-talk n cause Americans to change eir minds about the Berlin sit- tion," he said. If the USSR were withdraw troops behind the Pol- h border, there would be a ange in attitude. Culture-bound attitudes are oft- i stereotyped opinions which are, ually comparative, Porter said. hen questioning foreign students ho had been in the United States om six to eight weeks, Porter plained that he found that they iaracterized Americans as "rich, aterialistic, loud, happy, and ildike," but also found a. few ss negative characteristics. After longer periods in the nited States there was a char- teristic tendency away from this ereotype, Porter said. Culture bound, attitudes, can be fanged by communications and people-to-people relationships, it these attitudes- are 'frequently perficial, Porter said.Headded Lat a fallacy exists which says at these relationships can alter ion-to-nation relationships to iy appreciable degree. DIAL NO 8-6416 ENDS THURSDAY Sie invited love j --and hate. ies of Saturday Symposiums, con- ferences on the University held about the state, the President told a gathering of alumni and friends that "the change in our national posture in the years since Michi- gan sent Charles Wilson to Wash- ington to bring order to the Defense Department is truly marked." Russian Education He said the nation was "dis- mayed" when the Russians fired their first satellite, and shortly thereafter a group of University scientists met to analyze the sta- tus of Russian higher education- how far ahead of the United States they must have been to do something we weren't prepared to do." Then they explained what we would have to do to catch up. "We had to come a long, long way." He said that the University was "at the center" of the operations that eventually launched Col. John H. Glenn into orbit last week, and he related the "long years of effort and worry" it took to hold the campus together in that time, "working as we were in ,old and inadequate laboratories running the constant risk of losing personnel." Need Funds President Hatcher implied that not enough money went into the support of higher education in proportion to the space program. "The education of those who will carry on our advances in science must take a high priority," he said. Higher than any space ef- fort. We dare not slumber or sleep, for too quickly it can be- come too late." ,Earlier in the program, Univer- sity Executive Vice-President Mar- vin L. Niehuss and Vice-President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont presented a slide pro- gram on the University's needs. Pierpont cited a recent study which. showed that only three oth- er states among 50 have appropri- ated a smaller percent increase in appropriations since 1959-60. Mi- chigan appropriations have gone up seven per cent, while others have averaged 22 per cent, he noted. He said that, as a result of this a smaller faculty is teaching more students and improvements in buildings and teaching materials have been deferred. - Acker Announces Flight Vacancies Twenty seats are still available for the Airflight to Nassau, Al Acker, '63, chairman of the Michi- gan Union's Student Affairs Com- mittee, announced last night. Deadline for signing up for the April 7-15 excursion is Monday, March 5. a I WEATHER RESEARCH-University meteorologists will aid in the analysis of data collected by the Tiros satellites. Specific attention will be paid to the classification of cloud patterns and their regularities. 'U' Weathermen Analyze Tiros Cloud Photographs By THOMAS DRAPER A group of University meteorol- ogists are analyzing part of the information sent down by the Ti- ros satellites. Under contract with the Unit- ed States Weather Bureau, the group is trying to learn more about cloud patterns from the Tiros van- tage point, 500 miles high. "This does not have an immedi- ate value in helping predict the weather from day to day," Prof. Edward S. Epstein, head of the project, explains. "We're trying to classify cloud patterns, and find out the cause of pattern regulari- ties." Not a Spy The Tiros is not a "spy in the sky," Prof. Epstein says. "From 500 miles up, we don't take a picture with a good surface detail. Even if we should, the chances are only fifty-fifty that the cameras will be facing the earth. In fact, we're making all information from the Tiros satel- lites available to anyone includ- ing Russia." The satellites provide more in- formation. than can now be an- alyzed. In the project laboratory on the fifth floor of East Engi- neering Bldg. is a large, thick book on radiation measurement graphs of the earth by Tiros It. Selected Orbits "NASA scientists have record- ed here, information from a few selected orbits of just one satel- lite using just one part of the spectrum," Prof. Epstein explains. "One Tiros satellite lasts for about three or four months and makes more than ;,thousand or- bits. We tax our computers just recording the information. Most of the information has yet to be analyzed, and we still can use the rest of the spectrum for gaining new data." Prof. Epstein says "the Tiros project has been more successful than we expected. The pictures are clear and already surprising cloud pattern regularities have been photographed. {Within the year, a new Nimbus satellite with many improvements over the Tiros sat- ellites is scheduled to go up." NSF Grants To Aid Work On Automata The National Science Founda- tion has granted the University $46,000 for 'a two-year research project on "Theory of Automata." The purpose of the project, un- der the direction of Prof. Arthur W. Burks of the philosophy de- partment, is to study and derive formulas for machines capable of performing logical steps. The research should yield def- initions of mathematical com- puters called "automata." Members of the Logic of Com- puters group formulate mathe- matical expressions for the logic' of a machine's structure, Richard Laing, group member commented. He said that some of these for- mulas will be feasible for ma- chines and some will not. The group will have to sort these out. It is hoped that it will be possible to devise a test to determine which machines will be feasible and a method by which these machines can be pictured from the formulas. Laing maintains that this pro- ject will be useful because math- ematicians and scientists can simply write the formulas for what he wants a machine to do and the tests the group hopes to devisej will tell if such a machine is pos- sible. I rI 'U' MUSIC STUDENT: Baird Receives 'Met' Award In National OperaAuditions With Madeleine Robinson rho won the Golden ion Award for her performance t the Venice Film Festival. * FRIDAY * Double Encore Program "THE "TWO HUSTLER" WOMEN" n ,~ . DIAL NO 2-6264 By LOUISE LIND The Metropolitan Opera Com- pany recently awarded Edward A. Baird, Grad, of the music school a third place in its regional au- ditions. Baird, a bass-baritone, explained that his region, one of the 12 in the national competition, covers a six-state area including Michi- gan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Mary- land, New York and Ontario. "The inclusion of New York made this region a particularly hard one," he commented. Baird was the only man to place in the regional held in Cleveland last week. Although he received a $100 prize and a third place rating, Baird' called his award ,"primarily prestige" since only the first place winner goes on to na- tional competition. "I don't intend to enter the pro- fessional field, but will seek a position at the university level where I can double as a teacher and a part-time performer," he said. "There are more openings for the part-time performer now than ever before," he added. Baird is well known to Ann Ar- bor audiences, having appeared numerous times as a soloist with the University Choirs and the Michigan Chorale. He is presently working on his fifth major role for the University opera depart- ment and will portray Falstaff in the spring production of "The Merry Wives of Windsor." He was seen last summer as Figaro in the department's pro- duction of "The Marriage of Figaro," and as a guest soloist in "Elijah" at the National Music Camp in Interlochen. Rainey To Speak On Archaeology Prof. Froehlich Rainey, director of the University of Pennsylvania Museum, will speak on "What's New in Archaeology" at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud. B. The illustrated lecture is sponsored by the Kel- sey Museum of Archaeology and the Ann Arbor Society, Archaeol- ogical Institute of America. Prof. Vernon Dibble of the Uni- versity of Chicago will speakon "Four Types of Inference from Documents to Events" at 4:15 to- day in Aud. C. The lecture is sponsored by the sociology depart- ment. Will interview June-Grads with BSEE (electronics) ON CAMPUS MARCH 2 For The BEST in' BOOKS buy at FC+LLETT'S State St. at N. University I ARE YOU INTERESTED IN THE PICTURE ... OR JUST THE BRUSH MARKS? N U! - TONIGHT at 8 at H ILLEL You can see the whole picture (and help 'frame it) when you apply your engineering skills to any of the intriguing projects in which - Data-Design Laboratories is now involved. 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