DDFOL THE MICHIGAN DAILY :0 ;lee Club To Tour, 1ompete in Europe TEACHING RESEARCH: McKeachie Cites Lack of Usable Data cĀ± By JOHN BRYANT The Men's Glee Club will tour urope this summer, giving con- rts in 18 cities during their ve and one;-half week tour, the ub's conductor, Prof. Philip Duey iid yesterday. The club will also participate in ie International Male Chorus ompetition at the eisteddfod, a !elsh singing contest, in Llan- D11en, Wales. Four years ago, hile on their last trip to Europe, ie club won the competition. The itinerary includes: Italy, reece, Yugoslavia, A u s t r i a, zechoslovakia, Poland, West Ger- .any, Luxembourg, France, Eng- land and Scotland. It will leave by plane June 7 and return July 15. The club will perform their usual type of program emphasizing American music, Prof. Duey said. "I have often heard Amercian groups sing all-European programs while in Europe, Prof. Duey com- mented.."This is ridiculous. Euro-- peans want to hear American mu- sic when they hear American groups. When European groups come here we expect them to per- form their music, not ours." The trip is being paid for out of profits from glee club concerts and records Prof. Duey added. "We are not using any funds budgeted to us by the University for the trip." The eisteddfod is a number of singing contests in various cate- gories. There are approximately 20 entrants in the Male Chorus group, Yale University's Glee Club being the only other American entrant. Each group must sing Palestri- na's "Pueri Herbaeorum" and "Dana-Dana," a Hungarian folk song. In addition, the group must sing a choral work written by a composer of its own country. The glee club's choice is "Whitman" from Paul Creston's "Celestial Vi- sions." JATE STUDENTS 1 of asf il ve nta ri . -0 Discuss -Daily-Richard Cooper PEACE CORPS REPRESENTATIVES-An interested student (left) approaches a booth manned by (from left to right) Peace Corps recruiters Norman Shavin, Mitzi Mallina and Robert Gale, respec- tively. The information booth was set up in the lower lobby of the Union as part .of an intensive recruiting campaign. The representatives will also speak to fraternity, sorority and dormitory units. Peace Corps To Seek New Members By MICHAEL SATTINGER What makes teaching effective? Prof. Wilbert J. McKeachie, chairman of the psychology de- partment, said recently in a lec- ture on learning and teaching methods that the difficulty in an- swering this question is in compil- ing usable data from which to draw conclusions.. He began work as a graduate student to find such data. In ex- periments since then, he has in- vestigated the three basic types of teaching leadership. One is authoritarian leadership. The instructor manages all class discussion himself and grades the students continually on their knowledge. Debate System Another is the democratic style, in which the class is run'on a dis- cussion basis. The third is the "laissez-faire" method of teaching in which the students work mostly on their own. Prof. McKeachie has concluded that the particular teaching pro- cedure used by an instructor de- pends for its effectiveness in part on the personalities of both the teacher and the student. During the past several years, his research has been directed to- ward investigating these relation- ships between teachers and stu- dents, using French, mathematics and psychology classes 'to get more applicable data. teaching. DIAL 2-6264 * ENDS SATURDAY * "PICNIC" Shown at 1:00-5:00 and 9:10 "EDDY DUCHIN STORY" Shown at 3:00 and 7:10 Only This experiment included 31 in- structors and 1000 students. "I don't think we have found any final answers," Prof. Mc- Keachie said. Expectations "A teaching method which might work well in one college would not work in another, simply because of student habits and, motives. "One must vary teaching tech- niques to fit the goals of the class." he continued. Discussion methods may be better for developing crit- ical thinking. However, discussion is not an effective way of getting across a great deal of information. "A good lecturer is probably a good information carrier. The dis- advantage of books and teaching machines is that they are usually written for a mass audience. The lecturer can also use, feed- back from the class. If he sees sleeping students or blank stares, he can change his presentation accordingly. "Most students will not like any- thing you do that's differeit," he concluded. Prof. McKeachie spoke in con- nection with the Medical School lecture series on learning and teaching. U* PoVerty Challenge approved the "Chal- enge of Poverty in America" yes- erday as the topic for their next eries. Elizabeth Nusbaum, '66, was ected temporary chairman to or- anize the series, which is slated or the spring semester., I UNERGRADL GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS . . .comprising 350 outstanding Boys. Girls. Brother-Sister and Co-Ed Camps, located throughout the New England, Mid- dle Atlantic States and Canada. ...INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES concernlnq summer employment as Head Counselors. Group Leaders, Specialties, General Counselors. Write, Phone, or Cal in Person Association of Private Camps - Dept. C Maxwell M. Alexander, Executive Director SS West 42nd Street, OX 5-2656, New York 36, N. Y. By PHILIP SUTIN Acting National Concerns Editor Eight representatives of the Peace Corps will conduct an in- tensive recruiting campaign next week including shorter placement tests for prospective applicants be- ginning Monday. The drive is part of an experi- mental program of the corps which is seeking to fill the increasing demands for volunteers made by underdeveloped countries, Norman Across Campus Dr. Harold Hillenbrand, secre- tary of the American Dental Asso- ciation, will address the Dental School's honors convocation at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Psychic .. Prof. Edward S. Bordin of the psychology department will lecture on "Psychic Processes in Free Association" at the Psychology Colloquium at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud B. Housing. . The sixth annual off-campus housing conference will be held in the SAB today. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES I, CINEMA GUILD and the DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER present the First Ann Aror Film Festival Thursday-Sunday, May 23-26 Separate programs at 7 and 9 SINGLE ADMISSIONS: 50 cents Shavin, a special assistant of the corps's Public Information Divi- sion, said recently. Three recruiters arrived yes- terday and set up a public infor- mation booth on the corps in the lower lobby of the Union. The group and five others who will arrive Sunday will address frater- nities, sororities and dormitory units.I Shorter Test The new placement test - one hour long instead of the current four-hour examination-will be given in Rm. 3C of the Union. The exact testing schedule is available at the Peace Corps booth. Shavin said the new examina- tion is experimental. Besides the shortened length of the examina- tion, the results will be returned to the applicant within two weeks instead of the current several month delay. The Corps will expand to 9000 volunteers by the end of the year, he noted. Five thousand are cur- rently on duty or in training and the corps is looking for 4000 more to train this year. Corps to Train "The applicant does not have to bega specialist. The corps is looking for liberal arts graduates. He does not even have to know aj foreign language; the corps will train him," Shavin declared. However, the volume of applica- tions will not force a lowering of standards, he asserted. "If the standards are lowered, the corps will destroy its usefulness," Shav- in noted. Every country that currently has volunteers is asking for two to three times their number and some- countries that have asked for them have not received anyone, he noted. Two Types The countries ask for, essen- tially two types of volunteers, Shavin said. The first is teaching in virtually every field from the standard academic subjects ;and the arts to basic technical skills such as plumbing installation. The second field is rural com- munity development. Corpsmen work in rural areas helping the local personnel construct and de- - - - - more applicable data. TECHNICOLOR* ~t~I~&A A ~ chows Today 6:50-9:05 --va irnbinraik nLma kA I lavicg DIAL 8-6416 ' . BETTY FIELD'"SUSAN STRASBERG* CUFF ROBERTSON, ROSALIND RUSSELL *AND* NMOMM. velop new facilities, he explained. Agricultural advances are empha- sized, he noted. Training Centers Fifty college campuses have served as training centers for the corps. The University has sent two groups of volunteers to Thailand and Michigan State University has trained one for Nigeria. TOR APARTBY1THEIR LOES... UNITED BY THEIRHATES! THE AMAZINGeSTORY OF A STRANGE, STRANGE FAMILY COMES TO THE SCREEN! Thrilling true-life story...set to his own magic melodies! Joseph E. Levine in associationwi thEly Landau andJackJ. Dreyfus,Jr. presents KATHARINE HEPBURNIRALPH RICHARDSON JASON ROBARDS jR.I DEAN STOCKWELL ONE OF THE in Eugene O'Neill's TEN BEST LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT OF THE YEAR' Bosey Crowther, N.Y. Times produced by orected by - Abe Weiler, N.Y. Times ELY LANDAU/SIDNEY LMET Allon cook, world Tele. b Son An Embassy Pictures Release Recommended for mature audiences butiaUĀ® . I' LUCIEU COLOR By TECHNICOLOR'l REX THOMPSON " JAMES WHITMORE "N NE H0URS T0,RAMA,* COLUMBIA PICTURE'~-:'" r. n auee-.n. * SUNDAY' ~ "NINE HOURS TO RAMA" IA !_ Series Ticket (all 8 shows): $2.50 The best in domestic and Canadian Experimental Cinema! PLUS SPECIAL PROGRAMSM ANN ARBOR FILM MAKERS 8MM FILM FESTIVAL EXTENSIONS by MILTON COHEN and other exciting events ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM' Congregational Disciples E & R Stu- dent Guild, Cost Luncheon Discussion: "Wrap-Up," Noon; picnic-transporta- tion to Hudson Mills Park, 3 p.m.; May 17, 802 Monroe; a " E Mich. Christian Fellowship, May 17, 7:30 p.m., Union. Speaker: C. E. Hum- mel, field dir., Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship, Chicago. U. of M. International Folk Dancers, Dance Meeting, May 21, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill. Voice Political Party, Pre-SDS Con- vention Caucus. Everyone interested in attending the summer convention as a delegate should attend, there will be discussion of SDS national organization & national-local program for next year, May 17, 8:30 p.m., 536 S. Fourth Ave. Everyone welcome. Dial 5-6290 u Starts TODAY C' i_ : . Laugh? Don't wait any longer h~ ;x .* i We thought we'd need federal marshals for last night's laugh riot at Trueblood Auditorium. Our only worry is that it happens again tonight at 8:00. Please try to laugh softly so we can the roof on the Frieze Building. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PLAYERS present Jack G. O'Brien's wild farce keep to rent a a A of Matter Syle SAFE DEPOSIT BOX You'll feel much safer when your Im portant papers and valuables are se. cured against fire, lossiand theft. Cost -just pennies a day. Don't take chances with your travel money - carry AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES Prompt refund if lost or stolen, Accepted everywhere. Cost-. just a penny a dollar. ANN hT DDA" I Excellent seating tonight $1.00 Seating tomorrow, too $1.00 On second. thouaht. let vourself aio. 'X