PAGE TWO THE l1'IIICHIGAt'11 IIAILV WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1964 PAGE TWO THE MIUHIAN IJAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1964 PREMARITAL SEX: Chaplain's NS A Starts GOTTMANN LECTURE: Article Food Drive At Colleges Collegiate Press Service Stirs Controversy 'Megalopolis' Redefines Role, Importance of City By ROBERT JOHNSTON characteristics found in this area I can be found in areas of all de- "Megalopolis," a book by Prof. veloped countries, he said. To a WCC Plans Discussion Across Campus Collegiate Press Service Seemingly unscathed by criti- cism of his outspoken article on OTTAWA--A chaplain at Carle- extra-marital relations, Rev. Ger- ton University, whose views on ald Paul has written a second ar- premarital sexual relations arous- tide for the student newspaper, ed a nationwide controversy in tcefrtesuetnwppr Canada recently, will cntineasn The Carleton, criticizing outdated university chaplain. religious teaching. I ~TODAY, OCT. 21 ONoon - Sen. Philip Hart (D- Mich) will hold a press confer- ence on the Midwest Water Pol- By LAUREN BAHR lution Laboratory. Officials will be there to discuss functions of Womens Conference Committee, the laboratory in Room 5114 In- at their meeting Sunday, decided I stitute of Science and Technology to sponsor a housing panel to Bldg. explain to the women on campus 4 p.m.-Prof. Philip E. L. Smith the different types of living that of the University of Toronto will are available to them. 'speak on "Prehistoric Rock Draw- a rd 8:30 p.m.-Odeon Partos, direc- tor of the Rubin Academy of Mu- sic, Tel-Aviv University, will speak cI n The Problems of the Contem- porary Israeli Composer" in the Recital Hall, School of Music. TOMORROW, OCT. 22 8:30 a.m.-Nathaniel Stewart of the Alliance for Progress will speak on "How to Plan a Middle-Man- agement Development Program" at the Union. I VTTTT . A T"1T.IT DT-TT A rrl,- TT-;+-A PHILADELPHIA - The United Jean Gottmann, redefined the States National Student Associa- role and the importance of the tion is asking the nation's college city in today's society and in do- students to skip one meal next month in order to send food to indigent Negroes in the South. ing so defined a new type of city and added a new word to the com- mon vocabulary. I i E I 1 #{j 1 F A six-man committee represent-? ing the United, Anglican and Pres- byterian churches of Ottawa, which sponsor Dr. Paul at Carle- ton, said this week it will "pro- pose no action" on the matter. Announcement The committee made the an- nouncement after meeting to dis- cuss an article Dr. Paul wrote for The Carleton, which appeared un- der a headline "Premarital Sex Can Be OK." In a statement to the press the committee said, "The views ex- pressed by Dr. Paul are his own, not the officials views of the spon- soring churches. They do reflect, however, an aspect of the current debate on sexual morality which is taking place within the church. At the same time, we regret cer- tain lapses of taste and weak- nesses in the presentation of the argument." I I The program, called Thanksgiv- Gottmann, who has alternated ing Fast for Freedom, calls for between posts at the University of students with prepaid meal con- Paris and the Princeton University tracts to abstain voluntarily from Institute for Advanced study, dis- one dinner meal on November 19, cussed world reaction to his book the money being used to buy food. yesterday in Aud. D. The geog- raphy department and the archi- Different Campuses tecture and design college spon- Student governments at indi- sored the lecture. vidual schools are being asked to Study Groups direct the drive on their campuses. After World War II, Gottmann Last year, an estimated 17,000 said, responsible study groups pre- students at 42 schools participated dicted that the centers of such in the fast. Some $10,250 was Iprincipal cities as New York and raised and used to purchase more London had reached their growth than 80,000 pounds of food at limit and were about to decline. large extent the development of the Boston-Washington Megalo- polis is setting the pattern for the development of this new type of urban settlement around the world, Gottmann added. Politicians Halt Change While many bemoan the "de- cline of the central city," they are actually refusing to recognize its new function, Gottmann point- ed out. "Politicians naturally try to stop changes in the make-up and operation of their constituen- cies. New York, for example, has passed new zoning laws that try to preserve the old manufacturing industrial order rather than rec- odgnizenthe new white collar ori- entation." The purpose of the panel is to discuss the types of housing avail- able-honors housing, residential college, coed housing and the pilot project, the advantages and dis- advantages of each type and how each type contributes to the in- dividual's education. Three Districts The panel is scheduled for November 8 at 2:30 p.m. and is divided into three districts: -The first district is at Helen Newberry for girls from Pi Phi, Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Zeta Tau Alpha, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Delta Delta Delta, Phi Sigma Sigma, Betsy Barbour, Helen Newberry, Martha C6ok and South Quadrangle. ings from Egypt: Implications for 9 a.m.-5 p.m.-The Office of Re- North African Art" in Aud. B, An- ligious Affairs will hold inter- gell Hall. views for students wishing to par- 4:10 p.m.-Paul Tillich, theol- ticipate in a private seminar with ogian of the University of Ohi- Prof. Paul Van Buren of Temple cago will speak on "Grounds for University in Rm. 2210 SAB. Moral Choice in a Pluralistic So- ' 2:15 p.m.-Dr. Clinton Desoto of ciety" in Rackham Aud. Johns Hopkins University will 8 p.m.-Prof. Hans A. Bethe of speak on "Spatial Paralogic" in Cornell University will speak on Rm. 1057 Mental Health Research "Disarmament and Strategic Sta- Center. bility" for the fourth annual Dew- 4 p.m.-Prof. Peter Newman of ey F. Fagerburg Memorial Lecture Johns Hopkins University will 'in .Rackham Lecture Hall. speak on "Foreign Investment and 8 p.m.-Office of Religious Af- Economic Growth: The Case of fairs will present a student forum East Africa" in Rm. 301 Economics in discussion with Paul Tillich on Bldg. "Contemporary Man in Search of 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild pre- Identity" in the Union Ballroom. sents experimental films in the i 11 'U' Glee Club Hosts Belafonte Harry Belafonte will perform Nov. 2 at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Aud., sponsored by the Men's Glee Club. The Glee Club will use the money it receives to help finance a 14-day trip to the West Coast next spring, during which time it will perform for alumni clubs. Tickets go on sale Monday, Oct.! 26, at the Hill Aud. box office. Belafonte will begin his first college tour appearance in the United States in more than a dec- ade when he appears at Hill Audi- torium, November 2. He sets out with the distinction of, still being the only artist to have ever ap- peared at the World's largest the- atres for longer engagements and larger audiences than any other performing artist. s ( A spokesman for the six-man committee which met to consider Dr. Paul's article said, "The im- portant thing is for Dr. Paul to get back to work." 'Help More Than Harm' wholesale prices. "Since then 150 skyscraper office The food, mostly preserved meat buildings have been built on Man- and dried milk, was distributed to hattan alone. 600 families by the Council of Fed- "The function of the large me- erated Organizations (COFO), tropolitan area is changing and which directed this summer's vot- these changes were not taken into er registration drive in Mississip- consideration in making predic- pi. Each family received a one- tions," Gottmann said. week supply. "A dynamic metropolitan labor Jointly Sponsored market which once attracted in- The program, directed by NSA, dustrial and manufacturing plants is jointly sponsored by the Unit- is now becoming white collar ori- ed Youth Council, NSA, and the ented. What economists once call- Northern Student Movement. It ed secondary activities - offices. has been endorsed by Roy Wilk- laboratories, adult recreation and ins, executive secretary of the Na- other service functions-are now tional Association for the Ad- the main functions of the central vancement of Colored People; city," Gottmann explained. James Farmer, national director Functions Congregate in Cities of CORE; Jahn Lewis of the Stu- Strong forces tend to pull these dent Non-violent Coordinating functions into the central city, he Committee, and Nobel Peace Prize said. The wants and needs of the winner Martin Luther King. white collar labor market and of Last year food was shipped to company and government offices families in six Mississippi towns. and related services are so inter- The fast's sponsors hope towex woven that they naturally congre- pnd the program. Plans present- gate in and around one area, Gott- pandtheproram Plas peset- annsaid. ly call for shipping part of the He said that the outstanding ex- food to the McComb area, where ample of such an area lies be- a number of Negro churches and tween the New Hampshire sub- businesses were destroyed recently urbs of Boston and the Virginia during a period of racial unrest. suburbs of Washington, D.C. It Other than the McComb area, was to this conglomeration of cen- the Council of Federated Organi- tral cities, expansive suburbs and zations hopes to distribute food even small farms that Gottmann to as many destitute areas in the applied the name Megalopolis. Meanwhile, the middle class ex- odus to the suburbs is interpreted as abandonment of the city, but when the Megalopolis concept is applied in looking at the situation, the trend to this new Megalopoli- tan settlement pattern Is clear, -The second district will bet Gottmann said. "The Boston- located at Gsmma Phi Beta soror- Washington Megalopolis gained ity house for girls from Gammat 5.5 million population from 1950 Phi Beta, Sigma Kappa, AlphaF to 1960 and, at that time, included Phi, Collegiate Sororis, Kappa Al- 20 per cent of the national pop- pha Theta, Chi Omega, Alpha ulation in less than 2 per cent of Omicron Pi, Stockwell Hall, Ox- the country's continental land ford Residence, Mary Markley and area." Henderson House. -The third district will be lo- Recognition . cated at Alice Lloyd Hall for girls Megalopolis as a type of urban from Delta Gamma, Alpha Chi development must be recognized Omega, Delta Phi Epsilon, Kappa and understood as a new and fast- Delta, Sigma Delta Tau, Alpha growing settlement pattern Gott- Delta Pi, Alpha Gamma Delta, mann said. Only then, when its Alice Lloyd, Couzens and Mosher- many problems of government, Jordan. transport and efficiency have been ____ 8 p.m.-The PTP presents the Architecture Aud. APA in "Judith" at Lydia Men- 8 p.m.-The PTP presents the delssohn Theatre. APA in "Judith" in Lydia Men- 8 p.m.-Visiting Prof. Julio delssohn Theatre. Cesar Caillet-Bois will talk in 8:30 p.m. - The Paul Taylor Spanish on "La poesia Argentina Dance Company will present a contemporanea," at 3050 Frieze special lecture-demonstration at Bldg. Rackham Aud. S - -NT I 11 OCTOBER 21-25 THE HOSTAGE'I l u The article said, in part, "only if we are certain the sexual re- lationship will help more than harm our partner, in the long run as well as in the immediate en- counter, are we justified in pre- marital sex." In Dr. Paul's latest article, oa* "that old time religion," he said much of what passes for religion today, belongs to the past. It is 'grandpa's religion,' taken in here and there with a hurried stitch, ,but 'grandpa's religion' is just the same. And gradnson is not at all happy with grandpa's hand-me- DITH can Premiere! solved using technology already available, can it provide the "bet- ter life" it and our highly devel- oped, expanding economy have made possible." Gottmann emphasized that the Boston-Washington Megalopolis is not completely characteristic of other Megalopolis-type areas that may develop. "The problems of this new urban pattern can be solved. in many ways, depending on the public policy formulated by poli- ticians and the voters." The pattern, however, remains; the same, he said.1 DIAL 8-6416 ENDING TONIGHT down," he adds. 1 South as possible. But the same Megalopolitan DIAL 5-6290 ENDING THURSDAY Shows at 1,3, 5, 7 and 9:10 P.M. Come on daring, zyou're cut in on the theft of the century and J've got r> .: what it takes.. id FRIDAY "KISSES FOR MY PRESIDENT" . . . sv. t. W. ~ .{..". w.. . .....,,.s'r"' ". ... .. ...,..; ............::..::..;.. ; .;..... .:: :v:¢ ..} .... .. . . . . ...S by Brendan Behan i Americt DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ............... .........: Directed by Stephen Porter "Mad 6 Mirthprovoking!"... N.Y. Times "freewheeling, Bawdy, Poignant". New Yorker WED. 8 P.M. . ° ::: : . " . by Jean Giraudoux Directed by Ellis Rabb by the great French author of "Madwoman of Cha Iot," Ondine TgerattheGates. THIURS., FRI. 8 P.M.~ SAT. 5 P.M. & 9P.M. SUN. 3 P.M. & 8 P.M. .................... ........... .. ............................ iYii ... ....: r'"v~v.i ......:...................:..:............: i?'??]. ~.}..5;.. . . . . . 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 once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21 Day Calend ar Museum of Anthropology Lecture - Philip E. L. Smith, University of To-' ronto, "Prehistoric Rock Drawings from Egypt: Implications for North African Art": Aud. B, Angell Hall, 4 p.m. Office of Religious Affairs Levture - Paul Tillich, theologian, University ofj Chicago, "Grounds for Moral Choice1 in a Pluralistic Society": Rackham Aud., 4:10 p.m. Dewey F. Fagerbury Memorial Lecture -Hans Bethe, physicist, "Disarmament and Strategic Stability": Rackham Lee- I Finley, Barbara Nadal, Suzanne Nal- clobutenes," on Oct. 22 at 4 p.m. in Graduate Fellowship Office. Room 110 burg, students; N. Patrick Murray, as- Room 1300, Chemistry Bldg. Rackham Bldg. Applications for June sistant coordinator of religious affairs, or September 1965 and supporting cre- "Contemporary Man in Search of Iden- dentials should be filed with the Cen- tity": Michigan Union Ballroom, 8 p.m. American Chemic Socetyecture ter by Dec. 15, 1964. ______ Dr. A. K. Levine (General Helephone Professional Theatre Program - APA and Electronics Labs.), will speak on Fin Repertory Company in Brondan Be- "Principles and Applications of Las- al Payment of Fall Semester Fees hanrthe otage" MnBrendelssoh- ers, on Thurs., Oct. 22, at 8 p.m. in is due and payable on or before Oct. 30, han's "The Hostage: Mendelssohn Room 1300 of the Chemistry Bldg. 1964. Ther,___'If tees are not paid by this date: S1) A $10.00 delinquent penalty will be School of Music Dedication Series Coming Nov. 4-7, 8 p.m.: In the True- charged Lecture-Oedoen Partos, guest lecturer, blood Aud., Frieze Bldg., the University 2) A "Hold Credit" will be placed "The Problems of the Contemporary Players of the Dept. of Speech present against you. This means that until pay- Israeli Composer": Recital Hall, School the classical satiric French comedy, meant is received and "Hold Credit" is of Music, 8:30 p.m. "The Imaginary Invalid," by Moliere, cancelledc translated by the English actor-play- (1) Urades will not be mailed Lecture: The Spanish department will wright Miles Malleson. Box office open! i)Trades will not be ailed sponsor Visiting Prof. Julio Cesar Call- 12:30-5:30 daily beginning Nov. 2, or () Transcripts will not be furnished let-Bois speaking on "La Literature Ar- mail orders to University of Michigan 13) You may not register tor future let-oisspeaingon "a Lterauresemiesters. gentina Contemporanea," 3050 Frieze Players, Dept. of Speech, Ann Arbor.,u.1.sWs. Bldg., Wed., Oct. 21, at 8 p.m. Ticgets $1.50 and 1.00 for the Wed. and ( A Senior may not graduate with Thurs. performances, $1.75 and 1.25 for his class at the close of the current Research Club: There will be a meet- Fri. and Sat. semester ing for members of the Research Club 3)3 The Dean of your school or college of the University of Michigan Wed.,sCll be given a list of delinquent ac- oct 21 at$ 8nv prsm. in the Rackham East West Center Graduate Scholar- (.Mits. Amphitheatre. Prof. R. C. F. Bartels ships: Information and applications for Payments may be mae in person. or ;lll speak on "The Computer-What It these scholarships in fields having par- mailed to the Cashier's Ottice. 1015 Ad- Is and What It Does" and Prof. War- ticular relevance to the Asian and Pa- ministration Bldg., before x:30 p.m., Oct. ren E. Miller will speak on "Computers cific areas may be obtained in the 30, 1964. and Elections." The Council will meet at 7 p.m. in the East Council Room. 1! FONDA HUGUENY-ADAMS I. LEY -THURSDAY "ONE POTATO, TWO POTATO" General Notices ture Hall, 8 p-m _ _Special Lecture: Prof. R. Criegee, di- Office of Religious Affairs Student ' rector, Organic Chemische Institute Forum-Paul Tillich, theologian, Uni- (University of Karlsruhe, Germany), will versity of Chicago; James Helm, Marion speak on "Valence Isomerization of Cy- University Musical Society presents Tz and his 1taitian Dance K:. Companq "lean-Leon Destin6 is not only a splendid dancer but also an astute Y choreographer and first-rate rector of a first-rate ensemble." WALTER TERRY, N.Y. Herald Tribune IN RACKHAM AUDITORIUM SAT., OCT. 24, 8:30 I PROGRAM: "Village Festival"; Baptism of the Drum; Slave Dance; Yoruba Bakas; Witch Doctor; Bal Champetre: Contredance, Limbo and Banda; rrni IMRIA Pl \ aa - AfME i I