PAGE TWO }tl Y YTTT lY . a r a AS wrr rvar r r .r a r T TH 1fT'UIVt!A N 11 A TU~ 1 i MA*l lV ~iRRF .'#1\UENI1kLj k- ' THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1964 4 'DISTINGUISHED FA CULTY' Heady Notes Crucial Fields Local Construction, A Man's Heaven EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the teacher, or else a seminar situa- ninth of a series of articles on the tion where there are less than 15 recipients of two University faculty awards, the Distinguished Faculty students. This provides the best! Achievement Award and the Dis- opportunity for discussion and in- tinguished Service Award. dividual attention," he said. By MARK GUDWIN "One of the most satisfying ex- periences a professor can have is Prof. Ferrel Heady of the poli- giving direction to his best stu- tical science department and di- dents preparing their PhD dis- rector of the Institute of Public sertations," Heady commented. Administration is one of this Close Contact year's recipients of the Distin- He believes the teacher must guished Faculty Achievement keep in close contact with his Award. This citation carries with students, something which is pos- it a prize of $1000. sible .in his department where Heady most enjoys working with there are 30 to 40 students every students who are fairly advanced year. in their fields. Most of his stu- "One of my main responsibili- dents are interested in public ad- ties is to have enough time avail- ministration, political science, aca- able for keeping in touch with demic work and government work, them. It is possible we have pre- he said recently. vented our students from feeling "Students working along these lost more than other departments lines are headed for exciting ca- have due to our small numbers," reers. These will be the most cru- he said. cial fields in our society in the Because most students in the next generation or so," he said. Institute have a common field of Heady believes classes of all interest, it is easier to give them types and sizes have their place direction, he said. at the University, from the small- Counseling est seminar to the lecture situa- "The problem of counseling tion. seems to be more of a problem "In the MA or PhD program, for undergraduate students than however, the best teaching situa- graduate students," Heady said. tion is the one-to-one relation- A combination of teaching ship between the student and the and research is a necessity: oneI should not be in just one or the other. In many universities a great deal of emphasis is being right- ly put on research productivity. A faculty member should be quite ready to publish results," Heady said. By KAY HOLMES There are still a few things that women can't understand. On'e of these is the male at- traction to the pounding, grating, gyrating noise of construction. On the corner of South Uni- versity and Forest the new 18- story apartment building is being construc ed. At almost anytime of day a group of people may be seen congregated arounl this area of irritating sounds. These sidewalk superintendents have one thing in common: they're predominantly male. There are Ann Arbor businessmen, gasoline attendants, beats, Greeks, etir ed men and little boys. They start to walk across the improvised boardwalk, but before they can leave, they stop, lean against the board protection and stare. What is this fascination with such nerve-wrecking sounds? Why are so many men ensnared into staring hypnotically at the con- struction pit? Students? One architecture student ex- plained that "a lot of these ob- servers are architecture or en- gineering students." In fact, those taking Architecture 212 "have to write weekly reports on the prog- ress of construction," he added. "I cut my concrete class to watch them pouring concrete one after- noon," he said. ARTS and LETTERS By Judy Stonehill Soloists To Perform at'U' "We wanted to hear ourselves "It is a coincidence that all play," explained Melvin Kaplan, (the musicians) have risen in oboist in the New York Chamber their own careers," Mr. Kaplan Soloists, said. "The group is unique in For this reason, eleven New having adpersonnel recognized by York musicians banded together most audiences as the finest con- in 1957 in a unique chamber glomeration of musicians one music group. The New York could put together," he continued. Chamber Soloists performed Tues- Members of the New York day evening to a full house in Chamber Soloists who appeared in Rackham Auditorium. Tuesday's performance are Charles The group's uniqueness lies in Bressler, tenor; Albert Fuller, its repertoire, concentrating on harpsichord; Melvin Kaplin, oboe; pieces that neither an orchestra, Gerald Tarak, violin; Ynez Lynch, nor a string quartet would nor- viola, and Alexander Kouguell, mally perform. cello. Tuesday's program is a good Those who did not appear are example. It included Cantata No. Adele Addison, soprano; Samuel 72 for tenor, oboe, cello and harp- Baron, flute; Isidore Cohen, vio- sichord by Teleman, Sonata in A lin; Julius Levine, double bass, major for violin and viola by and Harriet Wingreen, piano. Haydn, and Concert Royal No. 4 All the members teach music in for oboe, violin, viola, cello, and New York City. harpsichord by Couperin. The University Musical Society The second half included a should be applauded for bringing Handel cantata for tenor, strings to Ann Arbor, "the only group and harpsichord and Quartet in of this kind in the world," as F major for oboe, violin, viola, Kaplan describes it. and cello by Mozart. For an en- core the group did a cantata by Hindemuth. -Daily-Jerry Stoetzer Sidewalk Superintendents of All Ages Gather at Apartment Site COURSE INTEGRATION: Experts Urge Emphasis on Humanities in Engineering PROF. FERREL HEADY ...._ .,..,... .... ... ...,.....,.,...,, ., i Merger of Union-League Activities Wings Analyzed (Continued from Page 1) Union Board of Directors: -The UAC should be associated with at least one of the govern- ing boards, since the student ac- tivities of both the Union and League currently "derive a major part of their strength and value through associations with their in- dividual boards;" -"To avoid an inefficient du- plexity of responsibility, the stu- dent organizations should be ac- tively associated with only one board of directors;" -The UAC should be under the supervision of the Union Board of Directors since "students are most fully integrated with faculty and alumni under the Union struc- ture." Organization Plan The student officers and the student activities functions of the merged organization would have no responsibility to the League Board of Governors, although the students would sit on the League Board to insure space in the League Bldg. for student activities.. The senior officers of the merged group would remain the executive officers of the Union Board of Directors, however. The proposed plan for the mer- ger must be approved by the League Executive Council - the student officers and committee chairmen of the League, the Un- ion Board of Directors, the League Board of Governors, the Regents and the student and alumni mem- bers of the Union. The League Executive Council and the Union Board considered the proposal at their meeting last week. Neither of them will an- nounce their decisions until the League Board of Directors acts on the proposal tonight. "We don't think it would be appropriate to ---finest quality laundry- Suits $1.15 use our decision as a means of in- fluencing the League Board," Un- ion President Kent Cartwright, '65, explained recently. Regental Consideration If the merger is approved by both boards and the League Ex- ecutive Council, it will be consid- ered by the Regents at their De- cember meeting and by the mem- bers of the Union in a referendum1 next January or February. There are several indications that the merger will be adopted. If the proposal had been rejected by either the Union Board or the League Executive Council, the League Board would not be meet- ing tonight to consider it. An article in the Union publi- cation stated that the merger is "about to be . . . implemented." It is highly unlikely that the of- ficers of the Union, familiar with the Union Board's attitude toward the merger, would have allowed this statement to be printed were the approval of the merger not assured. The League has already begun distributing the plan for thebmer- ger to all of its members. It too would be highly unlikely to go to all the trouble and expense if the merger did not seem imminent. The Regents would undoubtedly approve the merger, since the cur- rent plan is basically what they asked for. He believes -one-fourth to one- third of any faculty member's time should be devoted to re- search. Then, on a selective basis, provisions can be made for more research time. In the spring, Heady will go on sabbatical to the East-West Cen- ter of the University of Hawaii as a senior specialist in residence. The specialist program there brings together scholars from Asia and the West who are interested in public administration. Summer Job Bureau Alters Organization (Continued from Page 1) growing. In 1962 approximately 6200 students attempted to get jobs through the service. Out of this number approximately 2200 received them. Last year approxi- mately 8,650 students w e n t through the placement office and an estimated 2,400 got jobs through it. These figures include students who come into the service to look through the files for jobs more than once. "I would like to see more jobs available through the service in business and industry," Ardis com- mented. "Every year we have on file about 10,000 jobs in camps, 2,500 in resorts, a number which varies from year to year in business and industry and lists of a number of potentialeemployers in other fields," Peterson said. "One builds a reputation only by performing,"aMr. Kaplan said. In its early years, the group was fortunate to have been invited to! perform at The Library of Con- gress. Their performances there and at the Metropolitan Museum in New York are now annual tra- ditions. In 1961, the group played for for the Prince and Princess of Monaco in their palace. They plan to make their fourth trip to Europe this winter. A junior engineering student Collegiate Press Service said he "was observing the prog- WASHINGTON - Engineering, ress made since this afternoon,' colleges should integrate the social He lives near the construction site sciences with their discipline; and goes by it at least twice a otherwise, two Washington experts day. "It breaks up the monotony," warn, the engineer will not be he said. prepared for his future environ- Mud ment. A third man said he was This assessment came from "watching that fellow get out of Assisiant Secretary of Defense the mud." for Arms Control Arthur W. Bar- For those who lives near the ' ber and Michael Michaelis, a re- construction site, a daily inspec- searcher for the United States tion of the progress is common. Chamber of Commerce. However, one student said he Both men see beginnings of a "came over intentionally every trend away from defense-related day or two," although he doesn't f engineering. Instead, engineering live in the area. will be concentrated on solving such social problems as urban Another student said he "heard transportation, housing and ex- the noise and came over to take Lending the food supply, they feel. a look." tractors are attempting to sell. Social problems need technol- ogy. "Companies should deploy their major asset-the ability to attack a major social problem through a massive technological system," Michaelis said. "Technologically speaking, they could do it, but they are in- hibited by laws, regulations, old codes and a tax structure which inhibit the use of available tech- nical know how. These laws re- flect the past, not the future," he added. Michaelis noted that 70 per cent of university research is under- written by the federal government, particularly defense-related agen- cies. "The danger," he noted, "is thf Chic rno rnram"# K- MAtt'AS / j I THIS is what's hr appenin'! $: $, Barber noted that this move- at t s creates young men to Explaining his interest one stu- ment has already begun. He said whom the future industrial en- dent concluded, "Besides, I might that the federal government al- vironment will be quite foreign. live here next year." Another said lows military research contractors It might tend to create people why that he had never seen a build- to determine whether their com- find it hard to address themselves ing of that size being constructed. panies can move into such civilian to mundane, earthy problems." Several expressed an interest in fiesc mechanics.fl_ _ TODAY: 4:10 p.m. Arena Theatre Promptly Frieze Building THE LONG CHRISTMAS DINNER by Thornton Wilder Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre Admission Free l f !fG I 7 3 I t I' He cited a design for a techno-E "It's always fun watching an- logically efficient, lower-operating other fellow work," a retired man cost design for a hospital which added. some West Coast defense con- SUCH INTERESTING PEOPLE LIVE ON CHRISTOPHER STREET Meet The;; in LEONARD BERNSTEIN'S s The Musical Comedy Hit Based on "My Sister Eileen" PRODUCED BY MUSKET '64 December 2, 3, 4, 5-Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Prices: $2.50, $2.00, $1.50 TICKET SALES FISHBOWL & UNION LOBBY-10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. "': :"{: '"i{:}"{.:} " :{ r }: }^: '" }:{:i: V R :{ :.t {" HELD OVER By Popular Demand SEATS ON SALE AT BOX OFFICE Special Today thru Sat. 49c &99c Suits, Trousers Dresses, Skirts 1 hr. service 9 a.m.-4 p.m. KLEEN KING I cw inm u mmnmnm u mm mm i .mmmmmmmmm. ainmininmininu r~. umisa~s anmininm MWU I I I I I MAEDCHEN IN UNIFORM Tonight and Tomorrow German militarism developed by harsh and sadistic treatment in a fraulein boarding school. "The year's best film''-New York Film Critics. DIAL 662-8871 For Program Information THE GuNh BUILD IN THE ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM E " R " " M /N CONCER T HAL ZEIGER presents WITH PULL ORCHESTRA and introducing BIL L COSBY -JACK PAAR'S COMEDY STAR MASONIC TEMPLE (DETROIT) FRI., NOV. 27-8:00 P.M. ALL SEATS RESERVED-$2.50, $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 Seats on sale at Grinnell's ticket office and Masonic Temple box office. Mail orders filled; please address all mail orders to Grinnell's Box Of- fice, 1515 Woodward, Detroit, Mich. and enclose self-addressed stomp- ed envelope. ____ _ _.-- - _ 7 I A & P CLEANERS 312 E.Huron across from City Holl 668.9500 The Eastern Michigan University Players Present William Gibson's THE MIRACLE WORKER November 18-22 Tickets $1.25 Quirk Theatre For Reservations Curtain at 8:00 Phone HU 2-3453 " A aIe~a re"a ~ i A kOMISSION: FIFTY CENTS wewwomswaem ns Iwmwmmw wwm swws~srwa wiswwiw~rs ® wiwwa++. ..._ _._._.._ ..______._.._....___.._____.... _T.____.____________._ _...._.__._.. .___._.._. --._._. _ .._._ ' ..- Dial 662-6264 * STARTS-TODAY * 1 ATTENTION STUDENTS Why slave at the typewriter doing those term papers? Have them typed for you by experts. Your papers will have a neat and at- tractive appearance. Many satisfied students, in the past, have availed themselves of our service. 11 "I I "A lusty. boldly provocative production NOV. 28 NOV. 27 I I HAL RICHARD BURT1ON-' HAL WALI' PETER P EAN AVISIO N TECHNICOLOR' PAPAMOUNT 8-64161 DIAL Shows at 6:40 and 9:10 4-m All Seats $1.0 Any Time This Shown I American Premiere! a 0 WAR-&PEACE by Tolstoy-Piscator Directed by Ellis Rabb THE HOSTAGE by Brendan ehan r Why don't you? I I ENDS Shows at TONI T1, 3,5 y 7 and 9 :0 HR, "" "," m o UEY i I Bring your rough drafts (minimum 20 pages) to us. Directed by Stephen Porter i i I s I 11 -:. 3'Zs3 . > I