____________THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATUR ENT RESE A KC H: Barron Examines Upturn Of Interest in Creativity Brownell Cites Trouble Of School Finance Plan FOR 48 CARS: Parking Lot Opens for Public, Students {. --- By PATRICIA O'CONNOR The increasing interest in cre- ativity results from a radically changing view of the world and its pressing problems, said Prof. Frank Barron of the Institute of Personality Assessmenta and Re- search in Berkeley, California, yesterday. With the advent of the atomic bomb, the power of scientific thought has assumed an awesome character. In addition, creativity in personal life has become recog- nized as good, he noted. Recent research at the Berke- ley institute has been conducted on persons agreed upon by college professors to be among the most creative people in their fields. Basic commonly-used tests, U T'o Schedule Student Visits tests developed at the institute, and six-hour interviews were em- ployed with each of the creative writers, architects, research sci- entists, and mathematicians. Con- trol groups were used for compari- son. Measured I. Q. was found to be entirely unrelated to the degree of originality. Most of the creative subjects possessed high general in- telligence, however. Excellence of esthetic. judgment was also found to have a high re- lationship to creativity. Creative people let in more and arrive at a more complex structure of the world, he said. Shut Out Something By every integration a person. makes, something becomes shut out of hisworld.nA constant battle exists in the creative person be- tween the wish for integration and the desire for non-integration. Independence of judgment oc- curred in creative people more often than in others, according to Dr. Barron. In testing intuition, 100 per cent of the creative architects and 92 per cent of the creative writers evidenced intuition. This compares with a 22 per cent rating for the general public and proved decisive in separating the creative groups from the control groups. Perceptual Intuition The intuition displayed proved to be a perceptual type rather than a result of judgment. This further substantiates the idea that the creative person remains open to his environment, Dr. Barron said. Although many highly creative persons give the impression of be- ing unbalanced, Dr. Barron attrib- utes this to the creative person's desire for novelty. The creative person wishes to transcend the given, but he also wishes to return i x .i py L ) a s 1. u 1 r i i With less and less money coming. into the till, city schools are find- ing it difficult to educate the in- creasing number of students. According to Detroit Public Schools Superintendent Samuel Brownell, the troubles of most ur- ban public schools are caused by changing tax and population structures. At the recent 32nd, annual Conference on Teacher Over 700 high school and junior high school students will visit Ann Arbor this weekend. The 500 high school students will be here for the annual Uni- versity Day, sponsored by the Uni- versity Affairs Committee of the Michigan Union and the Office of Admissions. The students, all seniors from sttae high schools, will get their state high schools, will get their program beginning with a discus- sion of "The Selection Process" by Director of Admissions Clyde Vro- man at 8:30 a.m. in Hill Aud. Other events include campus, fra- ternity and sorority tours, mock lectures, open houses at various schools and colleges, and enter- tainment by the Friars. Over 700 junior high students will be guests of the women's phy- sical education department, in its physical education playday. JOHN IRELAND ... in 'Country Girl' with enriched experiences he transmit. can I NOW (pjr~IM Dial 5-6290 Academv A ward Winner . a ExuliveSpecial Engagement Best Actor! NO RESERVED SEATS! Maximlian scheli 3 PERFORMANCES DAILY! Best Spreenplay! UTlL i LiR bby Man SPlice! Tracy urlanister RichariWldark Manle Elicit JIlliamlnd Mxihi Sche mogom" ul ASMIN UDGMENT Evenings at 5:10-8:30 NUREMBERG Mati nees 1 .00 eleased thr UNITED ARTISTS renings and Sunday 1 .25 Name Ireland for Top Role In Production John Ireland, Hollywood and Broadway star, will appear with Gloria Grahame in the Ann Arbor Drama Season production of "The Country Girl," producers Ted Heu- sel and John Kokales announced yesterday. "The Country Girl," written by Pulitzer Prize winner Clifford Odets, will begin a week-long en- gagement June 11 at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Ireland has appeared in eight successive plays in two years on Broadway, including "Highland Fling" and "Doctors Disagree." His first film was "A Walk in the Sun. He was nominated for an Acad- emy Award for his performance in "All The King's Men." More re- cently Ireland has appeared in "Gunfight at the OK Corral" with Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster. Set Prooram On Teaching The Annual Spring Conference of the Michigan Association for Student Teaching will be held at the University today. It will begin at 8:30 a.m. with registration in the Rackham Building. The program includes a general session at 9:30 a.m. where a panel of student teachers will discuss "Student Teachers View Their Role," and a lecture at 10:30 a.m. by Prof. Fritz Redl of Wayne State University on "Mental Health and Student Teaching." At 1:30 p.m. there will be a discussion of the role of supervising teachers. Education, heldainnconjunction with the 75th annual Michigan Schoolmasters' Club meeting, Brownell cited five unique prob- lems of city schools. The first is the urban population shift. "There is in the city a high- er percentage of pupils with the greatest school needs," Brownell said, "for there has been a major increase in the numbers coming to the city from situations charac- terized by low income, meager homes, little schooling of parent or guardian." Change in Support The second problem is the change in school support. Because they are faced with a growing population and new technology, industries tend to move outside the city. This deprives the city of the value of the plant and takes away community leaders. The third problem is one of ur- ban redevelopment. The rebuilding of cities demands heavy expendi- tures. "As large numbers of fami- lies are displaced and at least for a time taxable property is re- moved from the rolls, shifts of population are hastened and fre- quently attendance in a school area is increased by hundreds of pupils almost overnight," Brown- ell said. Another one is the youth labor problem: there are "thousands of boys and girls between the ages of 16 and 23" who are not in school but who do not have jobs either. At least two-thirds of this group is composed of Negroes. Only Property Tax Finally, the fact that cities are restricted to local property tax support presents a serious prob- lem. Brownell said, "The local electorate may vote, as it has in Detroit, to increase its tax rate for schools for a five-year period, only to find that because of the decreasing tax base there is less and less to spend for more and more pupils." The Board of Edu- cation has no power to seecure the needed funds and the Legisla- ture, having a minority of mem- bers from the city, is not cooper- ating. IFIkReiss V iew s International Encyclopedia "The purpose of the new 'Inter- national Encyclopedia of the So- cial Sciences' is to get established scholars in all the major social science areas to write articles on their main theories and topics," Prof. Albert J. Reiss, Jr., of the so- ciology department and recently appointed associate editor of the encyclopedia, said yesterday. The scholars, from several coun- tries, will be persons who have made important contributions in their fields. Prof. Reiss will be doing some writing but will be mainly respon- sible for the selection of articles and contributors in the areas of sociology, socialupsychology and opulation and human ecology. A parking lot on the corner of Forest and Washington is now open for public and student park- ing, Larry Stinson, '63E, member of the Student Government Coun- cil Driving Rules Revision Com- mittee, announced. Standards The resolutions committee of the Michigan Schoolmaster's Club urged continuation of the authority of the State Board of Education in setting standards for Michigan te'achers. "We wish to commend the ef- forts of those educational lead- ers and those members of the State Legislature who recently resisted an attempt to lower teacher certification standards in Michigan," the committee report said. The report also commended the National Science Founda- tion and the College Entrance Examination Board for under- writing research projects and summer education programs for teachers, ---- - Beauty begins with TEN O*SIX LOTION! is also open to student parking, Stinson said. For a fee of 25 cents per day the student is permitted to drive his car in and out as many times as he wishes. This means that he can use his car to go home for lunch and then re- turn to the same parking space, Stinson noted. The capacity of this lot is 70 cars. Because the South Quadrangle triangle has been converted into a residence hall recreation area, this committee recommends that students with storage permits store their cars in the free colos- seum parking lot on Hill and Divi- sion Streets, Stinson stated. 40 per cent of campus cars were unregistered, the University first gave courtesy warnings, then more tickets. Thoburn To Head Services Division Norman L. Thoburn has been named manager of the Institute of Science and Technology Sup- porting Services Division. The Supporting Services Division pro- vides the library, publication, technical and business services necessary for the operation of IST. This lot is not reserved for parking or for car storage, but for transient parking, he said. The capacity of this area is 48 cars. The fourth level of the new Coupled with the extra parking space, the University has intensi- fled driving regulations this se- mester. As a ersult of a Driving and Parking Rules Revision Com- neesrafrteoeaino S.wsbigijce noteise I V Thayer Street parking structure I mittee survey which found up to City Refuses To Mandate Commission The City Council Monday night refused to call upon the Ann Ar- bor Human Relations Commission for a statement of position on fair housing legislation prior to next week's council vote on the matter. The vote, following party lines, went 8-2 against the motion of Mrs. Eunice L. Burns (D), after a clash between Mayor Cecil 0. Creal and Councilman Lynn Eley (D). Councilman John Laird (R) said that such a request would be premature, since the commission has yet to hold a public hearing in the matter. Eley charged that partisanship was being injected into the issue. N Ev Dial eww 'iIEN 2-6264 TH L *STARTING SUNDAY N DING TONIGHT. ULA PRENTISS E HORIZONTAL IEUTENANT" p*I AND GRIPPING FILM I'- Lit s stuawocWmT el . cs "THE' BES FILM OF THEYEAR!" .-Notio"l *ord of Rev' "TOP DRAMA!" rL'o,. N.wmda "CHARGED WITH -SU >' a :} ' ?" i ...Do a osa . ~w g~--w Ten-O'Six cleans your skin .ith.healing medication Cleanses immaculately, deeply ... soothes with emol- lients. The 10-0-6 formula duplicates nature's normal skin balance-to reduce oil- iness or relieve dryness. Protects for hours against blemish-causing bacteria. 10-0-6 Lotion is the one cosmetic that helps your skin to complete, natural beauty. Remember 10.06, twice daily. SALE NOW ON $500 size for $3.95 VILLAGE APOTHECARY 1112 S. University Phone NO 3-5544 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. L&M gives you MORE BODY in the blend, MORE FLAVOR in the smoke, MORE TASTE through the filter. It's the rich-flavor leaf that does it! I ir LIGGETT i MYERS TOUACCO I oa s S wU im I o1 I I -'- * r HERE'S HOW MEN AND WOMEN AT 56 COLLEGES VOTED: oft*%'00 punoie palow$ %ti7S %~ss"- smoilsg % 6V" %T --- . ...ON %8LaL' l£ m P1 0M MN NWVOM N3YI "SPECIAL ACCOLADE" ;. AND A-i RATING -NATIONAL LEGION OF DECENCY Adult Eves. and Sun........$1.25 Adult weekday matinee..... .75 Children under 12............50 S.G.C. SUNDAY at 7 and 9 Faulkner's PYLON as TARNISHED ANGELS Rock Hudson, Robert Stack, Dorothy Malone Short: Subject Lesson. Award of exceptional Merit The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The U~niver- ity of Michigan for, which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. SATURDAY, MAY 12 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold open house for students at their home Wed., May 16 from 4 to 6 p.m. Tryout for Musical: Additional try- outs for singing-and-dancing chorus for University Players production of "The, Boys from Syracuse," Tues., May 15 at 7:15 p.m. in Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg. There will be a read-through of complete script, practice on songs, and then tryout for new chorus men and women. Rehearsals will be almost night- ly May 15-29, and nightly June 7 through last performance June 30. Events Sunday Cornet and Trumpet: A program by cornet and trumpet students in the School of Music will be presented on Sun., May 13, 4:15 p.m., in Lane Hall Aud. Soloists will be Ernest Caviani, Edward Cowling, Richard Jackoboice, Philip Warsop, Joan Forster, George Berryman, Lawrence Elam, John Lin- denau, David Wolter, Richard Lowen- thaI, Ronald Bell, Donald Tison, Byron Pearson, Melvin Jones and Dennis Hor- ton. Open to the general public. Placement ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please sign interview schedule at 128-H West Engrg. MAY 16- General Foods Corp., Battle Creek, Mich.-Ail Degrees: ChE, EE & ME. June & Aug. grads. Men & women. Summer Employment: Jrs. or above in above fields interested in working for Gen'l. Foods in future years. Supv. & Project Sngrg.-Mfg, processes of cer- eals & carton containers & beverages. U.S. Army Corps of Engrs., R. & D. Labs., Warfare Vision Branch, Electrical Dept., Fort Belvoir, Va.-MS-PhD: AE & Astro., Res. & Dessg. Astro., EE, Meteor., Physics & Astro. w/ exper. to head projects for: Atmospher- ic Optics, radiation measurements of nite sky for battlefield observation. 2-3 yr. prog.: would be good for thesis project. Gaseous Electronics plasma res., hi-energy discharge lamps, quite funda- mental investigations. June & Aug. grads. Men & Women. U.S. citizenship required. Res. & Des. (Continued on Page 4) ORGANIZATION NOTICES Cong. Disc. E & R Stud. Guild, Sem- inar: "The End of History," 9:30 a.m.; Discussion: "Art & Responsibility of the Artist-Literature," 7:30 p.m.; May 13, 802 Monroe. It I -..~- -- I HELD OVER (through Monday) ( m 1 DIAL 8-6416 "'A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE' is the first strong American film of 1962 and may well remain one of the year's best!" -N. Y. Herald-Tribune THE BOLDEST VIEW OF LIFE YOU HAVE EVER SEEN! 11 I . ..~- UW