M. NTAL PATIENT FACILITIES: Sociologist Discusses Halfway House Professors Cite Merits By ROBERT SELWA University of Pittsburgh sociol-, ogist prof. David Landy outlined the five main ' problems facing halfway houses and other transi- tional facilities for mental patients in a social work colloquium yes- terday. The first problem is the right length of stay for a patient, Prof. Landy said. The second problem is the cru- cial one of the numerous patients who, aft r returning to society, YAF's To Decide On Disarmament Young Americans for Freedom willmake a policy statement on disarmament at a meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Michigan Un- ion. later have to be readmitted mental hospitals, he continued. The third is the selection facilities, he said., to of Negative Criteria "Up to now, selection has been based on negative criteria-whom houses do not want, such as al- coholics and homosexuals, rather than whom they do want. "If transitional facilities are to be effective, they will have to es- tablish positive criteria. They will have to act on the basis of whom will do well," he commented. The fourth problem is the cost of maintaining the facilities, and the fifth problem, the extent of the need of the facilities. "Some attempt should be made to assess the need - otherwise, how do we know how many to establish?" Prof. Landy asked. Prof. Landy noted halfway houses are beneficial not only be- cause they cushion the "shock" of transition for the mental pa- tient, but also because they blend in with the community and give him a place in it. The halfway houses also give continuity to mental treatment, he added. He described them as being dif-" ferest from hospitals in four ways: they are open systems, while hos- pitals are closed; they are lay- oriented while hospitals are )ro- fessional-oriented; they provide an independence-generating environ- ment, while hospitals make pa- tients feel dependent; and they emphasize a non-patient role. Prof. Landy, author of numer- ous magazaine articles including "The Problems of Seeking Help in Our Society," was a researcher at Harvard University before going to Pittsburgh. Morningside Begins Corps SIOUX CITY-Morningside Col- lege has launched its own "Peace Corps in Reverse" program. Under the plan, 17 African stu- dents are now receiving training free of charge. r An accelerated schedule will graduate participants with bache- lors' degrees in three years, and the cost is borne by branches of the Methodist Church. Lawyers Appeal Wingeart's Case Attorneys for Jerald L. Wingeart, former University student, in pris- on for assaulting a blind girl and robbing her escort last summer, have begun an appeal to the Mich- igan Supreme Court. Of Projects By MARK ALLYN Prof. Robert Schnitzer, director of the University Professional The- atre Program, said he has "im- pressive reports" of the value of cultural exchanges. Prof. Schnitzer claims that ex- changes of performing artists have "proven effectiveness" in improv- ing relations. He was speaking in regard to the new cultural exchange to which the United States and the Soviet Union have agreed. The ex- change involves the Benny Good- man orchestra, the New York City ballet, the Leningrad Philharmon- ic, the Ukranian Dance Ensemble and Bolshoi Theatre Ballet. The 33-page agreement listed exchanges in science, technology, agriculture, construction, trade, medicine, public health and sports as well as the arts. Joint Film A joint film'involving producer Lester Cowan and the largest So- viet film studio was projected in an agreement and announced by Cowan. Based on Edmund Wilson's "Meeting at a Far Meridian," ap- proximately one-fourth of the film will be shot in the United States. Filming is to begin early next year. Prof. Schnitzer was "deeply im- pressed" with Russian audiences saying that "the Russian audi- III iI ) PROF. ROBERT SCHNITZER . ..discusses culture ences are very knowledgeable." He attributed the success of Ameri- can performers to "the people's sincere desire to know more about us and to the high artistry of the American performers. Positive Effect Prof. William Ballis of the poli- tical science department felt that such an exchange would have a positive effect on Soviet-United States relations, adding that the drama, music and ballet in the So- viet Union are on ,a "very high lexel." He warned, however, that "Soviet films are instruments of propoganda," saying that "pro- ducers of art are ultimately re- sponsible to the organs of the Communist Party." Prof. Claribel Baird of the speech department agreed with Ballis's view of Soviet culture. However, propaganda infiltration was "not true of the films I've seen," Prof. Baird said. Voice To Join In Fund Drive Voice political party will sell educational materials about the Southern civil rights movement in the Fishbowl today and tomor- row. Included among the literature will be a pamphlet written by for- mer Daily editor Thomas Hayden, '61, entitled "Revolution in Mis- sissippi." This pamphlet, distrib- uted by the Students for a Demo- cratic Society, deals with the im- portance of incidents which took place in McComb, Mississippi Voice will send the money re- ceived from the sale of this lit- erature to the Southern Student Freedom Fund. ctI 1.} s Use Our Convenient Mician AdOGram LINES, 2 3 4 ONE-DAY ,70 .85 1.00 SPECIAL SIX-DAY RATE 3.45 4.20 4.95, Just Fill In The Following Form and Send to THE MICHIGAN DAILY 420 MAYNARD ANN ARBOR, MICH. i Phone NO 2-4786 1 :00 to 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. sU * r DATES TO RUN I *r r * NAME PHONE * r ADDRESS Figure 5 overage words to aline. - - E I *,U 11 i Get rid of those mid-term blues at the MNT E CIARL BAL L this Saturday . . . from 9 P.M.-1 A.M. I 1 1 I