TILE MICHIGAN DAILY PANSION: Cite U.S. Population Problem By ARTHUR LEVY The population problem "affects more people than any disease" and must be thought through by everyone, Prof. Ronald Freedman of the sociology department told the Washtenaw County League for Planned Parenthood in -the Michi- gan Union Tuesday. Speaking on "The Population Problem: At Home and Abroad," Prof. Freedman described the problem in the United States as "not an emergency but serious and of growing urgency." He said the American baby boom results from more people getting married, more early marriages and early births. To illustrate each of these fac- tors, he said that in the 1930's 30 per cent of American women 25 years old were single, while the corresponding figure in the 1950's was 12 per cent. Also, during the first 18 months of marriage, 37 per cent of American women in: the 1930's had their first child, while in the 1950's the number is 62 per cent. Population Expansion Prof. Freedman stud the earlier babies are born, the earlier they grow up and the sooner the pop- ulation expands, thus emphasiz- ing the question of spacing chil- dren over a period of time, rath- er than' the question of family SLATER'S PAY size. Babies are not coming from large families, he stated. Eighty per cent of the increase in the birth rate between 1940 and 1958 is due to the first, second, and third child. Middle Class Values The population explosion in the United States is due to a change in middle class values and teach- ing birth control methods and 'techniques won't change the sit- uation, he added. "The reason most people are having large fam- ilies is that they want them" not that they lack birth control edu- cation, he said. The vast majority of Americans use contraceptives, but a signifi- cant minority do not know about these methods or do not use them effectively. He stated that 16 per cent 'of all married women inter- viewed in his recent study report- ed their last pregnancy was un- wanted. Prof. Freedman read sev- eral cases in which large families were comprised of unwanted chil- dren. He said Planned Parenthood has a challenge in reaching the large number of people in the lower eco- nomic status, especially Negroes and Puerto Ricans, and that these individuals should be given the help they want in learning about "the rationality of size of families and amount of spending." He claimed that organized efforts have not been successful or pri- marily directed to reaching the lower status people. - Views Relationships Prof. Freedman also viewed problems in the relationship be- tween a wife and her husband in families of low economic level. Most contraceptions are female methods, but 'the man must also' be reached if the birth control program is to succeed, he stated. The beginning of a "rapproach- ment" between Catholics and non- Catholics on the issue of fanily planning. The Catholic church is aware that too many children can harm the welfare of a family and prominent Catholic spokesmen have asked for governmental sup- port through the National Insti- tute of Health to perfect the rhythm method. This method, if perfected, could be the most efficient of all fam- ily planning programs, he said.' Union Plans Nassau Trip The Student Affairs Committee of the Michigan Union is sponsor- ing an "Airfiight to Nassau" to take place over spring .vacation, April 7-15. All students, faculty, Universi- ty employes and their immediate families are eligible for the trip. There will be room for 86 people on the direct, round trip flight from Detroit to Nassau. Cost of the entire trip including transportation and lodging in Nas- sau will be $175.00. Harry Youtt, '64, who is in charge of planning for the trip, points out that round trip plane fare alone is normally $183.00. A mass meeting for those in- terested in the trip will be held Feb. 15 at the Union. aw DIAL 2-6264 ENDING SATURDAY * Starring- Leslie Carn Maurice hevalier Louis Jourdan Shown at 2:20-6:05, and 9:50J s AND 0 I PROF. RONALD FREEDMAN ... birth control FELLOWSHIP: Offer Plan for Travel, By SANDRA JOHNSON Work and travel programs to the Soviet Union, Latin America, Japan, Europe, Washington, D.C. and California are being offered by .the Lisle Fellowship. Designed to "foster individual development through group work in cross-cultural relationships," the program is under the direc- tion of Dewitt C. Baldwin of the Office of Religious Affairs, and his wife Edna, founders of the fel- lowship. The program, sponsored by the fellowship since its founding in 1936, also provides "practical ex- perience through participation in community activities,,Beldwin said. Latin America has added to the program, he noted. "This is a par- ticularly exciting venture because that area of the world has had very unsatisfactory relations with 14orth Americans in the past. A Lisle Fellowship group could have much to contribute to improve these relations," he added. Under the program, a group first meets and familiarizes itself witn the new surroundings. A sizable minority of the group being na- tive to the visited area helps the others get acquainted with it and is people, Baldwin explaied. In the next phase, a group di- vides into -units of approximately five persons. These units then work in business, industry, agri- culture or government for a short period. The group forms again and dis- cusses its experiences. Then it splits again into small units and works at different projects. This process is repeated three to five times during the program. REAL NO 8-6416 Shows at 7-9 P.M. * ENDING SATURDAY , 1 1 'IU:aTc+ Report Sets Building Priorities By CAROLYN WINTER "In determining the order of priorities, the University seeks to weigh the needs of each academic unit against those of other units, so that the total building program will show a coordinated develop- ment toward established educa- tional goals." This statement was among the conclusions in the 1960 Spring Re- port of the Subcommittee on Campus Planning and Develop- ment of the Senate Advisory Com- mittee. The report adds that the more fully a faculty planning commit- tee can document its development needs, the better are the chances that a particular building project will receive a high priority. Fuller Documentation Fuller documentation of needs helps the University to be better armed in its efforts to raise the necessary construction money. It is to be remembered in deal- ing with priorities, the report con- tinues, that the numbered posi- tion of a project within the first five or ten is not an absolute priority rating, but rather an in- dication of relative rank within the group identified as the most urgent. Existing Facilities The demand for replacement re- flects the age and obsolescence of existing facilities. In this age of rapid technological advance, rela- tively new buildings canbe effect- ed by obsolescence especially in the fields of medical science, bio- logical and social science, engi- neering and physical science. The demands for expansion re- flects the growing number of uni- versity students and the increas- ing need for research space as an integral function in the academic programs. The University has sought to measure the extent to which the facilities occupied-by various edu- cational activities deviate from the accepted standards of space and equipment and then to weigh the value of each proposed new facil- ity in relation to the operation of the University as a whole. Specialized Areas Projects demonstrating the most urgent inadequacies of space and equipment in highly specialized areas-primarily those assigned for the most advanced education and professional training -have been given highest priority. However, when the legislature votes on granting funds for build- ing projects they re-evaluate the priorities, not always awarding funds to number one on the list. In this way, the Music School has been overlooked for five years. CADAVERS: Huelke Notes 'U' Role In Secret Grave Robbing By LOUISE LIND/ "Although grave robbing did not originate with the University, it was used extensively by the med- ical school in the late 1800's as the only means to obtain an ade- quate supply of cadavers," Prof. Donald F. Huelke of the anatomy department said. Addressing the Monday night gathering of the Washtenaw His- torical Society, Prof. Huelke spoke on "Troubled Times for the Uni- versity-Body-Snatching in Mich- igan." When the medical school was founded in October, 1850, it found itself caught in the middle of the controversy over grave robbing. Anatomy Course A basic anatomy course was one of the first that beginning medical students were required to take. The course involved demon- strations of human anatomy with 15-20 cadavers. Yet, at that time grave robbing was forbidden by themselves on their motto, "We raise them up," Prof. Huelke said. Attempting to avoid any unnec- essary controversy, the University forbade the resurrectionists to des- ecrate any local graves for fear of angering the people in the im- mediate area. Despite these precautions, one grave desecrated in Jackson Coun- ty was traced to the university. After the local people heard of this scandal, only an armed patrol of alerted medical students was able to restrain them from burning the school. 'Pickle'Barrels "The stolen bodies were sent to the University from great dis- tances in barrels marked 'pickles' to keep themr from being opened," he said. "This is probably how the expression, 'Don't get yourself into a pickle' evolved," he com- mented. Barrels from all over the coun- try reached Ann Arbor addressed to non-existent business firms. This procedure enabled the Uni- versity to pick up the freight from general delivery without arousing unnecessary curiosity.. To protect their dead from the execrable body snatchers, the peo- ple of the day, would hire "grave watchers" to guard the cemetery plots at night. No one was safe from the looters, and in one in- stance the body of a body snatch- er himself turned up in the anat- omy lab at the University. State of Emergency "At the end of the Civil War, matters had reached a state of emergency. With the great influx of medical students,- the demand for cadavers had risen from 20- 125," Prof. Huelke related. Prof. Corydon Ford, then pro- fessor of anatomy at the Univer- sity, appealed to the State Legis- lature for help. "In 1875, it pass- ed the first real anatomical act which provided that all bodies buried at public expense were to be sent to the University," Prof. Huelke elaborated. "After about 1881, there were no more problems with grave robbers. In 1958, Prof. Russell T. Wood- burne of the anatomy department had a bill passed that revised and brought up to date the old anat- omy act. It established an ana- tomical committee to have con- trol of all unclaimed bodies, their transportation, preservation, and allocation. r r t l t t i J STEREO and HI-FI DEALER'S WEDNESDAY -January 17 THRU SATURDAY - January 20 PRE-INVENTORY SAL on Every Label in Our Stoc ABC COLUMBIA LIBERTY ANGEL COMMAND LONDON ARCHIVE CONTEMPORARY MERCURY ARGO CRI MGM ARTIA DECCA MONITOR ATLANTIC DOT NEW JAZZ AUDIO FIDELITY DYER BENNET OFFBEAT BACH-GUILD ELEKTRA PACIFIC JAZZ BETHLEHEM EPIC' PRESTIGE BLUE NOTE FANTASY RCA BLUESVILLE FIESTA REPRISE BOSTON FOLKWAYS RIVERSIDE CADENCE GOOD TIME JAZZ SPOKEN ARTS CAEDMON GRAND AWARD TICO CAPITOL HI FI UNITED ARTI CHANCELLOR IMPULSE VANGUARD CHECKER JUBILEE VERVE COLPIX KAPP WESTMINSTER * IMPORTS EXCLUDED .d scun records, n 337 South Main Street FREE PARKING , NO 5-446( OPEN MON. THRU FRI., 10-9 P.M. SAT., 9 TO 6 P.M. Free Shuttlebus Return from Downtown PAID ADVERTISEMENT presents THURSDAY and FRIDAY DINNER AT 8:00 7:00 and-9:00 SATURDAY and SUNDAY PUDOVKIN'S STORM OVE R ASIA 7:00 and 9:20 $3.98 ist 2.4 $4.98 list 3.09 5.98 list 3.o7 PROF. DONALD HUELKE ... grave robbing law and there was no other meth- od by which the University could obtain human bodies. "The school had to have human specimens in order to graduate well qualified doctors," Prof. Huel- ke said, "and so was forced into the undignified profession of grave robbing for the sake of the ad- vancement of medicine." "The medical school surrepti- tiously bribed 20-30 people in dis- tant areas to do its body snatch- ing at night under the cover of. darkness," he explained. 'Resurrectionists' These "employes" were termed "resurrectionists" a n d prided I Body Parts A complementary act made legal for a person to will all part of his body to science. Today, no one robs graves ax more and the medical school si doesn't pay for its bodies, he sa .I The Ann Arbor Civic Theatre cordially invites you to an evening of Theatre you will never forget, as we present one of the most powerful plays in American theatre history. THE CRUCIBLE I by ARTHUR, MILLER Directed by Donald Lovell it or ty- till' yid. Dinner at 8:00 (1933) written by George Kaufman and Edna Ferber, is a story that tries to capture life's habit of shifting into curious patterns for no reason whatsoever. In this case, the lives of eight people are moved into the pattern which leads to their becoming eight guests at a Dinner at 8:00., For this story, director George Cukar had one of the greatest casts ever assembled. At the center is John Barrymore as, Larry Renault, the "burned- out" star around whom the ironic tragedy revolves. Marie Dressler is superb as a buoy- antly ancient actress; Wallace. Beery, Jean Harlow, Lione Barrymore, Billie Burke, Lee Tracy, and Edmund Lowe are among the other luminaries. The film is a feast of grand- style acting and perennially fresh theatre. Seeing an extensive series of Soviet films in 1947-48 was a unique experience historically. The Cold War was at its most frigid. With iost Americans there was at least an initial defense of negative reactions to the work of Eisenstein, Pudov- kin, Dovchenko. Were not these films pure propaganda? What were they trying to say apart from advancing the cause of the totalitarian government whose viewpoint they obviously re- flected?nAt that point I felt that this was particularly true of the brilliant series of Eisenstein films. Nothing that happened appeared to say more than that "history" has caught up with the opponents of the Marxist; dialectic. Beautiful though his films were, they negated the in- dividual. I found them monu- of his great contemporary rival, Vsevelod Pudovkin. H it seemed, were present in est measure the qualities I lacking in Elsenstein: Poe lyricism, humanity. They sessed the epic sweep no than Eisenstein and an e skill in editing to reach po' full climates. Pudovkin i great romantic artist, El stein a classic; in these e experiences Pudovkin's imm acy was directly moving. For Eisenstein the hero of films was always the "mass a concept that Americans, n ished in an individualistic dition, find difficult to un stand. The masses, however society in the classic Mar framework; and when I i Eisenstein a classic artisi is in this sense of his subo nation of the individual to s ety. Pudovkin's esthetic was q different, concentrating on inner emotion, the -release the individual through me ingful thought that is eve ally released in revolutio: action. Whatever their di ences, Eisenstein's analysi Pudovkin is an illumine tribute: "In his films the s tator's attention is not con trated on the developmen the plot, but on the psyi change undergone by some dividual under the infiuent social, process. Pudovkin1 real living men in the centi his work. His works act dire by their emotional power." Storm over Asian is a pr ent film. The Communist x lution in Chinamight well the determining factor in balance of power in this An Allied Artists Release STARTING SUNDAY MODIGLIANI De MONT PARNASSE Il DIAL NO 5-6290 NOTE TIME SCHEDULE WHEN!.. ..Opening night TONIGHT, January 18 other performances, January 19, 0 WHERE! . . . . . .Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre - .A m. m . d i b F For All "A very wonderful mixture of Chinese tradition and American charm." -Michael Harrah, Daily - ---- - - - --- d v .,. f n - - '. II 1 v n lnWAV' IS JOYOUS MULSICAL LOJVE STOIfYI