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April 29, 1961 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1961-04-29

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURAP

AY, APRIL 29, 1961

Lecturer Evaluates Dreams

Experts To Formulate
Corps Language Plans

PROF..

ALLAN RECHTSHAFFAN1
.. dreams necessary J

"Another interesting phenome- son will dream of subjects relating ANN ARBOR:
on is dreams are forgotten to his recent life, and later in
uickly during further sleep, al- the night will dream of events in
aough our daytime experiences his early childhood. P l n~ t d
re not forgotten during the Dreams do not occur in verti-
ight." This- points to some special cal sequence, as chapters of aamn
iteraction between dreams and book, one built upon another.
eep, Prof. Rechtschaffen said. Rather, a person may have the O f By n
Another popular notion that his same dream first each night, he
tudies disprove is the concept of said. By MICHAEL HARRAH
Customer shopping habits are
" ethe object of a survey of 14 Ann
Hour Town Victors Arbor shoping districts now being
sponsored by the geography de-
partment and the yGraduate
School.
"Ann Arbor needs a master plan
to determine a solution for the
ndowntown congestion," Frederick
W. Boal, Grad., director of the
survey, explained.
B.He said that in recent years the
'P $:;:.}.::4r. "+h. titi ~j}:;}{.40central area of the city has been
worried about loss of business.
Last year the city planning com-
. mission and the Ann Arbor Chain-
ber : of Commerce laid plans for
an extensive business survey to be
rconducted this summer.
.n.:gCity Survey Similar
4 --nBoal said that the shopping ha-
bits survey was "a take-off" from
the city survey.
{v: "The big factor in our survey is
.. -,discovering how people mrove
around the city," he said. "If
enough people are contacted na
distinct shopping pattern will de-
t... velop.
"Our surveyers will ask people
.. . . ..what kind of a shopping trip they
areon, where they are coming
from, and wheretheyare going.
{nFor instance, if a person is snop-
UByping for groceries, he tends to
go to just one store. Therefore, a
{grocery store might well be able
to locate independently of other
"-sn r ' n b y'n"i stores, while a drug store might
better locate among a variety of
r stores."
Honoraries Conduct Survey
Boal said that Mortarboard, the
senior women's honorary, Alpha
DUTCHMEN--The Dutch theme of Betsy Barbour and Evans Phi Omega, the service fraternity,
Scholars took overall honors in yesterday's Spring Weekend and other volunteers are presently
actviteswiningfirt piseinthebeaty ontst nd lacng conducting the survey which will
actiitis, innng irs prze th beutyconestandplaing contact some 2,500-3,000 persons.
second in the "Hour Town" house-building contest. Delta Gamma He explained that 14 areas were
and Phi Gamma Delta took second place overall, winning the being covered because each draws
house building event and taking third for their "beauty". people from different locations.

By CAROL ISACKSON
Twenty-five language experts
from Asia, Africa, and Latin
America will meet at the Univer-
sity Monday and Tuesday to study'
a proposed program for Peace
Corps language instruction.
The conference, supported by
a grant from the Language De-
velopment Section of the Office
of Education, will include repre-
sentatives from the corps, the Of-
fice of Education, and other na-
tional organizations.
Select Juniors
For Program
At Sheffield
By CAROLINE DOW
Eleven juniors have been chosen
for a semester-abroad program
at Sheffield University in Eng-
land, Prof. Claude A. Eggertsen of
the Education School announced.
The group will leave Sept. 1 for
a semester of intensive study and
practice teaching in Sheffield.
Their schedule will consist of 9
weeks of lecture (six days a
week), 7 weeks of practice teach-
ing, a week of intensive study at
Ashford in Kent and a one month
Christmas vacation.
Prof. Eggertsen, who visited
Sheffield early this year reports
that the 1960 group was success-
ful and Sheffield was interested
in continuing the program.
Six education school students,
Robert F. Swanson, Nancy Ellen
Simone, Joan Roth, Donald S.
Newport, Barbara M. Goldman
and Elenore Ferencsik, and four
literary students, Ruth Ann Joyce,
Elizabeth Ann Maxon, Alice Carol
Nugent and Kim Patrick Sebaly
and Jane Anne Comen, A&D,
have been chosen.
Some changes have been made
in the program, however. The stu-
dents will travel together to and
from Sheffield accompanied by a
visiting professor-adviser from the
University who will remain with
them during their stay. Also, a
special seminar for the returned
students is planned the second se-
mester to fill in any gaps in their
training.
Arrangements for Sheffield stu-
dents to study here, making the
program a real exchange, have
been made, Prof. Eggertsen said.

Sessions will attempt to co-
ordinate the various approaches in
the teaching of English as a for-
eign language so that a peace
teaching program can be estab-
lished.
The conference will also suggest
a comprehensive and effective pro-
gram for Peace Corps use in teach-
ing English in foreign countries.
The conference will begin with
representatives of the Peace
Corps discussing their needs in an
English teaching program. This
project, corps officials feel, will
become one of the major under-
takings of the organization.
Conferees will then discuss var-
ious aspects of language educa-
tion. The group will study the ef-
fectiveness of varying lengths of
training programs and possible
ways of organizing such programs.

DEAN DEBORAH BACON
*. . views corps

COLLEGE ROUNDUP:
Students Oppose Action
In Cuba by U.S., Soviets

UJI?- * '"
CONTINUOUS TODAY
FROM 1 O'CLOCK

By MALINDA BERRY
BERKELEY--The Latin Ameri-
can Students Association at the
University of California adopted
a resolution opposing American
and Soviet intervention in Cuba
and Latin America in general.
The adoption followed six hours
of heated debate which resulted in
six Cuban students walking out
before the resolution was ap-
proved.
"The Cuban tragedy is being
used by UCLASA to further hatred
against the United states," claim-
ed Jorge Morales,tone of several
Cuban students who left the as-
sembly.
UCLASA stated in its resolution
that "United States imperialism
is responsible for the dictatorship
of Batista, which is the starting
point of present problems in
Cuba."
The resolution condemns poli-
tical intervention in Latin Amer-_
ica and the promoting of dictator-
ships in order to protect economic
interests.
It rejects the infiltration of
extra-continental ideologies such
as that of Soviet Communism in
Latin America, but it recognizes
that it has been promoted and
even made attractive by the con-

DEAN COMMENTS-
Bacon Evaluates Peace Corps Mission
The role of the Peace Corps is
to send what the recipient nation concept is not new, it is a "w
derful idea which can bed
requests and not merely what the
U.S. wants to send, Dean of Wom- and should be done-well."
extreme hardships of the prog
en Deborah Bacon said Thursday will demand very dedicated
-evening in a talk in South Quad- ple, she added.
rangle. Miss Bacon also speculated
"According to the Peace Corps University personnel and facl
a applications the first travelers might be used to train at 1
must have mechanical skills, lan- some of the personnel.
guage proficiency, good physical At the present time the Eng
health and excellent mental sta- Language Institute. is working
bility. "Mere enthusiasm will not language teaching problems
} be enough," she said. the Peace Corps. The Universi
In evaluating the corps she also the site of conference on
pointed out that, although the problem as it relates to the co

sequences of United States policy
in Latin America.
LAFAYETTE-A Mid-West Stu-
dent Civil Liberties Conference is
to be held in Chicago the weekend
of May 6.
The purpose is to stimulate stu-
dent activity in the civil liberties
movement which has established
itself within the last year.,
The main objective of the move-
ment is to support the efforts to
abolish the House Committee oni
Un-American Activities. Those
who have already been active in
the movement will be able to ex-,
change ideas, experiences, and fu-
ture programs.

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LAST PERFORMANCE TONIGHT
Friedrich Duerrenmatt's
iHE V SIT
8:00 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
1.75, 1.25
University Players - Dept. of Speech
S.G.C.
TONIGHT and SUNDAY at 7 and 9
PUDHOVKIN'S
THE END OF
ST. PETERSBURG
Pudhoukin's Film of the Russian Revolution
with

t pp

Dial 5-6290

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