PAGE SIX
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
FRIDAY, 12 MARCH 1965
PAGE SIX TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, 12 MARCH 1965
... . ..
TONIGHT at NEWMAN
331 Thompson
PLAYGROUND FOLKSINGING:
Grad Gives Aid to Song Instructors
if
5:10 P.M.
6:00 P.M.
7:30 P.M.
Community Mass
Perch Dinner
Walt Hardy
CHRISTIANITY: A RELIGION FOR
WOMEN AND CHILDREN?
When you care enough to send the very best
ST. PATRICK'S DAY
307 South State
Open Monday Evenings 'til 8:30
PROF. FRED HADDOCK
GETS GRANT
The awarding of a $290,000
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration grant to Prof.
Fred Haddock, head of the Uni-
versity's Radio Astronomy Lab-
oratory, was announced today in
Washington by Rep. Weston
Vivian (D-Mich). The grant is
to cover a three-year investiga-
tion of galactic and planetary
radio astronomy.aThe Univer-
sity laboratory has been involved
in interplanetary radio and ra-
dar studies for many years and
reports of finding the moon and
Venus were announced by Had-
dock at a meeting of astrono-
mers at Tokyo in 1963.
-. 1
By SHIRLEY ROSICK
Looking for a summer job that
offers you a chance to use your
musical talents? Miss Shireen
Hutte, Grad, is training college
students for jobs leading children
in folksinging on playgrounds
throughout the country.
Miss Hutte said recently over
100 cities have expressed interest
in the program, "Folksingers for
Young Folks."
She conceived the idea for the
folksinging program after working
for two summers with the Ann
Arbor recreation departmentas
a leader of playground folksing-
ing groups.
nsuay the children ranged in
ages from 4 to 12, but with the
informal nature of the program,
older children and sometimes even
parents drifted in, she said.
Very Relaxed
Miss Hutte described the atmos-
phere of such a program as very
relaxed, not at all like the or-
ganized classroom situation of
some playground activities. Chil-
dren come because they really en-
joy singing, not because their par-
ents sign them up for a class.
Anyone is free to wander in or
leave whenever he likes, she noted.
Though it might seem unusual
that children should enjoy folk-
singing-commonly associated with
"protest" songs-Miss Hutte point-
ed out there are many types of
folksongs. Children are attracted
by folksongs that are typical of
their lives and the region they in how to lead children's singing
live in, she said. groups. Students are responsible
They enjoy fantasy songs and for providing their own trans-
songs about remote people and portation to the place of employ-
places as well. The rhythm of the ment and for finding their awn
songs and just having some fun living quarters.
with their friends also appeal to Miss Hutte, along with a groupa
the children, she added. of folksingers, plans to travel
Placement, Training throughout the United States this
For a small fee, the training: summer to interest more cities in
program offers placement with the her program and to present hoot-
recreation department of one of nannies in cities that cannot af-
the cities included, plus training ford to hire playground help.
'U' Survey Explores Negro
College Student Motivation
By CAROLE KAPLAN that heighten student motivation.
Motivation
A study of educational and vo- According to Study Director
cational motivations of students Accorin otvatiri tor
Patricia Gurin motivation is more
Indirect costs are defined by Bureau of the Budget Circular
A-21 as follows:
-"General administration and general expenses" are the
costs to a university of its executive and administrative offices.
This refers to general administration, nct departmental or re-
search administration. Theoretically a certain amount of effort
on the part of the gen-rai administration is devoted to research
affairs. Accountants must estimate how much of the costs
of this administration can be attributed to the presence of
research on campus. Employe benefit expenses and pension
plan costs for all employes connected with research may be
included in this category;
-"Research administration expenses" are, at this university
the costsof running the Office of Research Administration and
of the section of the Office of Business and Finance which
handles research administration. Examples of the work for
which costs are incurred in this category are: contract ad-
ministration, accounting and auditing, security, purchasing,
personnel administration and editing and publishing of research
data;
-"Operation and maintenance expenses" are the costs of
operating and maintaining a university's physical plant. As
with administration expenses, accountants must decide what
percentage of these costs can be attributed to the presence
of research on campus. Examples of the costs considered are:
plant administration or supervision; janitorial service.
-"Library expenses" are simply the costs of running the
library plus a use allowance for the book collection (every time
a book is handled in any way it depreciates in value).
-Accountants also set up a "Use allowance" to compensate
for the researchers' use of buildings, capital improvements and
equipment. In this way research money contributes to the
amortization of the buildings, improvements and equipment
that it uses. Thus, when these capital items must be replaced,
there is a fund of money built up to be used in replacing themt;
-"Indirect departmental expenses" are the costs of ad-
ministering the departments, schools, colleges and other divisions
of a university.
In addition to these, the University also includes a small
amount of student services costs in indirect costs computation
because of the relatively large number of students engaged in
paid work on research projects.
in Negrodcolleges, presently being
conducted by the University In-
stitute for Sociall Research, should
provide an indication of the ef-
fects of the changing political
situation on the Negro college stu-
dent.
The survey, taking place in Ne-
gro colleges in the South, has two
major goals:
-To explore some of the fac-
tors affecting students' educa-
tional and vocational goals, and
--To look into the characterist-
ics of the college environment
1
h - -- - -__ifl
THERE IS STILL TIME ...
to sign up for
MICHIGAN UNION
AIRwkFLIGHT to E
Flight 1 . .. May 6-June 6
Detroit-London-Amsterdam-Detroit 245
Swissair B707 Jet..............
Flight 2.. ..May 4-Aug. 11
New York-Paris-New York
Air France B707 Jet2.................z65
Contact Michigan Union-Student Travel Comm.
HURRY-Limited number of seats left
Mass Meeting!
Find out about petitioning for a
Paid Staff Position on the
MICH IGAN ENSIAN
than the desire for success, it is a
function of the individual's esti-
mate of his own worth and his
chances for success.
The current study will be at-
tempting to measure the effects
of the new opportunities opening
up for the Negro student on his
self-estimate, as well as the ef-
fects of active involvement in po-
litical and school activities.
Questionnaires
Last fall all students at the col-
leges took a three-hour battery of
questionnaires and tests. At the
end of the second term, freshmen
will be retested, to determine the
effects of adjustment to college
life.
In addition, at four of the 11
schools, students identifiedeby
other students as being leaders,
intellectuals, politically active, or
very creative will be interviewed
in detail about the ways in which
college experience has encouraged
and hindered the development of
their goals and aspirations.
The results will be made avail-
able in a report to the Office of
Education in the Department of
Health, Education and Welfare,
which is sponsoring the study,
sometime during the 1965-66
school year.
For the best in
BOOKS
Buy at
FOLLETT'SI
State Street at N.U.
Government Grants Need
Indirect Costs Assessment
Sunday, March 14
7:30 P.M.
(Continued from Page 1)
The Bluebook was in general use
until about the middle 1950's,
when it was replaced by Bureau
of the Budget Circular A-21,
which, like its predecessor, in-
cluded many changes in indirect
cost procedures.
The definitions A-21 gives are
still generally accepted as the ba-
sic guidelines for determining in-
direct cost amounts (see box).
However, A-21 is not binding on
any government agency. Its stated
purpose is to serve merely as a
guide.
Mainly it is used in connection
with government research con-
tracts, which are supposed to pay
all indirect costs (as opposed to
grants, which do not). A large
share of the University's research
contracts are with the defense de-
partment. A-21 details the pro-
cedures that are used in determin-
ino b th the dirn ntnd indir t
420 Maynard
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111,
ing Dom ne recL ana lnurecL
DAILY OFFIC
The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of The Univer-
sity of Michigan, for which The
Michigan Daily Assumes no editor-
ial responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be-
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding
publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday
for Saturday and Sunday. General
Notices may be published a maxi-
mum of two times on request; Day
Calendar items appear onceonly.
Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.
FRIDAY, MARCH 12
Day Calendar
Programmed Learping for Business
Workshop-Geary A. Rummier, director
"Use, Selection, Evaluation, and Writ-
ing of Programmed Materials": Michi-
gan Union, 8:30 a.m.
Training and Development, Personnel
Office, University Management Seminar
-L. Clayton Hill, professor emeritus of
industrial relations, "Basics of Super-
vision": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m,
I Bureau of Industrial Relations Per-
sonnel Techniques Seminar-Eric Vet-
ter, School of Business, Tulane Uni-
versity, "Manpower Forecasting and
Planning": Michigan Union 8:30 a.m.
Cinema Guild: The Ann Arbor Film
Festival: Architecture Auditorium, 7:00
and 9:00 p.m..
costs that defense department
contracts will reimburse.
The auditing principles in A-21
also serve as a general guide for
the University in determining how
much indirect cost money it
should try to recover from other
agencies that sponsor research.
A-21 thus provides a model the
University can use for non-defense
department sponsored research.
As A-21 says, indirect costs are
incurred for "common or joint ob-
jectives," and thus cannot be
treated as costs to be paid for di-
rectly in research aggreements.
But since they are costs never-
theless, and since costs must be
paid by someone, such costs are
labeled indirect costs, and "all
research projects are supposed to
contribute to paying them, col-
lectively.
Tomorrow: The administra-
tion of indirect costs at'the
University.
IAL BULLETIN
Choral Union Series Concert-Robert
Merrill, baritoned: Hill Adu., 8:30 p.m.
Doctoral Examination for James Ger-
aid Redfern, Romance Languages &
Literatures: French; thesis: "A Lex-
ical Study of Raeto-Romance and Con-
tiguous Italian Dialect Areas," Fri.,
March 12, E. Council Room, Rackham
Bldg., 4 p.m. Chairman, Ernst Pulgram.
Doctoral Examination for Sarah Janet
Slagle, Psychology; thesis: "Self-Es-
teem and Patterns, of Defense," Fri.,
March 12. 3020 Frieze Bldg., at 1:30 p.m.
Chairman, D. R. Miller.
Dept. of Philosophy Presentation:
Ninian Smart, University of Wisconsin,
will read a paper entitled, "Mysticism
and Religious Experience," today at 4:15
p.m., 2003 Angell Hall.
Psychology Colloquium: Dr. Paul M.
Meehy, University of Minnesota, "The
Schizotype: A Method for Identifying
a Latent Clinical Taxon," today at
4:15 p.m., Aud. C, Angell Hall.
Biological Chemistry Colloquium: Dr.
Murray Goodman, Polytechnic Institute
of Brooklyn, "Sterochemical Models of
Biopolymer Structure," today at 4 p.m.,
M6423 Medical Science Bldg.
Ramindranath Tagore Memorial Lee-
tures: W. Norman Brown, University
of PennsylvaniaB"The Unity of Life,"
today at 4:15 p.m., Aud. F, Physics
(Continued on Page 7)
i
1
presents
ALEXANDER ECKSTEIN
of the U. of M. speaking on
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AND POTENTIAL OF
COMMUNIST CHINA
Dr. Eckstein is one of the foremost experts
on the Chinese economy.
FRI., MARCH 12, 8:00 P.M. UGLI Multipurpose Rm.
presents
BERNARD FALL
of Howard University, speaking on
VIET-NAM AND CHINA:
ENEMIES OR BROTHERS
Dr .Fall annorpI Iannrv 1 on Meet The Press.
T -s
Sund g!
Long Distance station rates
are lowest anytime on Sunday
We're just beginning to realize how true it is that a man's
thinking determines his life. Yet it was many years ago
when the Bible proverb was written, "As he thinketh in
his heart, so is he." This is one reason why prayer is so
important. Prayer helps to bring our thoughts under the
controlling power of God - to give us "the mind of
Christ." You're invited to hear a one-hour public lecture
on this subject by William Milford Correll of The Christian
Science Board of Lectureship. Title: "Your Thinking
Determines Your Experience." Everyone is welcome,
,a .. : . .:;