I1 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY cYTVI"Av lrlklk("lPlt4lP.VU 92 IOAA l TIlE MICIIIGA1~T U1AIT.V r .TIY, l~t3 , is 96 VISITING SOCIAL SCIENTIST: 'U' Reputation Lures Guttman By LILLI VENDIG Prof. Louis Guttman, an inter- national authority on social and1 psychological measurement, has come here to spend a year work- ing with what he describes as two world-renowned departments -the University's psychology and sociology departments. Hp is serving as visiting profes- sor in both, on leave from the past few years he has developed "facet theory" as a general ap- proach for designing behavioral theories in a way which ties them immediately with empirical data. Important applications have al- ready been made for the defini- tions of inteliligence and of inter- personal relations. He also devel- oped a method for radial plotting in the field of mental testing. Guttman is the originator of scale analysis, a technique for studying the structure of qualita- tive data. He developed the pre- liminary ideas while he was a graduate student and perfected them while working on morale studies for the American Army during World War II. This work began immediately after Pearl Harbor, when mei. were complaining because they were trained without weapons, Guttman said. Food was bad, the barracks were impersonal and the men were homesick, he added. Guttman's research group at- tempted to guide the general staff in finding a solution to these problems, and they used scale an- alysis in their work. Their morale studies were expanded to all thea- tres of operation throughout the war, and have been reported in the classical four-volume series, "The American Soldier," Gutt- man said. His technique for scale analysis is non-metric; data need be clas- sified only by items, each a set of mutually exclusive and exhaus- tive categories. Scale analysis has been used to rank people by their behavior, political parties by their ideolo- gies, consumer products by atti- tudes toward them, and Supreme Court justices by their judgments on various cases. It is now being used in anthropology, political sci- ence and economics, as well as in psychology and sociology. In Israel, Guttman used facet theory and scale analysis to de- termine a system of job evalua- tion for all civil servants for the Israeli government to aid in de- termining the salary for each grade. The overall rule for determin- ing the level of a job was the amount of control the individua had over his work, as expressed in three different ways: -How detailed the guidelines for his work are; -The amount of subordination to the supervisor; and -The amount of time under su- pervision. "This may be one of the most important current practical appli- cations of scale analysis," Gutt- man said. In his current research, Gutt- man is attempting to study the relationships between tests meas- uring analytical ability and tests measuring achievement ability His studies utilize the new non- metric computer technique he de- veloped this summer before leav- ing Jerusalem, which is operation- al on the University's IBM 7090 computer. HEAVEN ON EARTH?: Neirmi-in P The Week To Come: A Campus Calendar SUNDAY, DEC. 6 TUESDAY, DEC. 8I 2:30 p.m.-The University Musi- 3 p.m.-David Halberstam, Pu- cal Society will present Handel's litzer Prize-winning New York "Messiah." The University Choral Times correspondent, will speak Union, conducted by Lester Mc- on "The Reporter in Vietnam" Coy, and the University Symphony in the Rackham Ampitheater. Orchestra will take part in the Haberstam is a 1955 graduate of program. Harvard College, where he was 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. - Cinema editor of the Harvard Crimson. Guild will present "Los Olvidados" 1 8 p.m.-Charles Morgan, Direc- in Archil cture Aud. tor of the Southern Regional Of- MONDAY, DEC. 7 fice of the American Civil Liber- 8 p.m.-The Women's Research ties Union, will speak in Rm. 100, Club will present Mrs. Phyllis ; Hutchins Hall, Law Quadrangle. Halladay speaking on "Water, a 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music Basic Problem in Changing Af- Dedication Series Faculty Recital ghanistan" in the West Confer- presents Jerome Jelinek, cellist, of ence Room of the Rackham Bldg. t h e Stanley Quartet, playing 8:30 p.m.-The music school suites for the violincello by Jo- s will sponsor a Composers Forum hann Sebastian Bach in the Rack- . featuring works by student com- ham Lecture Hall. posers in Recital Hall, North THURSDAY, DEC. 10 - Campus. The composers who are 7 - to be featured are Richard Toen- 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. - Cinema' sing 68G Laurie Efrein '69M, Guild will present Sternberg's '6 "Anatahon" in Architecture Aud. Russell Peck, '66M, and Daniel 8:30 p.m. - T h e University Perlango, '66M. Choir, and Orchestra, conducted by Maynard Klein, will give a : public concert of Christmas music in Hill Aud. The free concert has been an annual event for the past (1neW R lPates 15 years. DYFFC.A.L BU L ET.:..v........". DAILY OFFICIAL BUN03LLETIN ..4 ....... v..~. . . . . . . . .. h 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 sLould 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. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 6 Da Calendar School of Music Recital-Piano Ma- jora: Recital Hall, School of Music, 4 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital-Stan SHale, violist: Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. Band Meeting: The Michigan March- ing Band will hold a meeting regarding Rose Bowl plans this afternoon at 4:30 p.m. in Harris Hall. All members are requested to attend. General Notices PhysicaltEducation-Women Students: Women students who have not com- pleted the undergraduate physical edu- cation requirement should either reg- ister for it the second term or re- quest an administrative defer until Term IIIA. Administrative defers are available by petitioning in Office 15, Barbour Gymnasium, and, if granted, will permit a student to wait until the outdoor season to complete the re- quirement. to attend the Health Service between that will be interviewing at the Bu-. January 4 and 9. reau of Appointments for prospective teachers for 19$5. Women's Research Club Meeting: Mrs. TUES, DEC. 8-- Phyllis Halladay will speak on "Water, Southfield, Mich.-Elem. K-$; J.H.- a Basic Problem in Changing Afghani- Math, Girls Phys. Ed. stan," Mon., Dec. 7, West Conference Detroit, Mich.-All Fields. Room, Rackham Bldg., 8 p.m. Port Leyden, N.Y. (Lewis County Schs.)-Now-Speech Ther., Sch. Pay- summer Intern Program Meeting: chologist; Jan. 25-Chem./Gen. Set.;2 For all students interested in summer Sept. 1-Elem., Spec. Ed., MR., Art, work in Washington, D.C. This meet- Home Ec., Rem. Read., JH English. ing is intended primarily for those whoW' did not attend the October meeting. ED., DEC. 9-- To be held in Multipurpose Room, Un- Farmington, Mich. (Clarenceville P.S.) dergrad LIbrary, 4 p.m., Tues., Dec. 5. --Elem. K & 6, vocal, Art, PE (man or woman), Library; H.S. Engl./Speech. s Garden City, Mich.-Start Feb. 1 -- i en t (Kalamazoo, Mich.--Start Jan. 25 - Bureau of Industrial Relations Per- Elem., J.H.-Biol., Math, Bus; Ed.; sonnel Techniques Seminar - Howard Sec. Couns.; Elem. Couns., Spec. Ed.- Peck, Hewitt Associates, Illinois, "Com- Type A, PE (man or woman). municating Employe Benefits Effective- THURS., DEC. 10-- ly": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. Grosse Ile, Mich.-Elem.-Art, Lib. (9/65); J.H.-Lib., Vocal & Instrum. Engineering Mechanics Seminar - Music; two positions to combine-Ind. David R. Jenkins, assistant professor Arts, Fine arts, Home Ed.. Gen. Set. of engineering mechanics, "A Non- Katonah, N.Y.-2nd Sem. - Home Linear Problem in Parametric Excita- Ec., Elem.-3rd Grade, School Psych. tion": 311 W. Engrg., 4 p.m. Wayne Mich.-Feb. 1-Elem.-2, 3, 4; J.H.-Sci., Ind. Arts, Engl. School of Music Composers Forum- FRI., DEC. 18- Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. Fairfield, Conn.-For Sept. 1965 - Elem. K-6, PE, Reading; J.H.-Engl., PlaCement Soc. St., Sci., Math; H.S.-Bus., Eng- ' 1lish, Fr./Span., Chem./Gen. Sci., Math, AVVnTVV.MFNrqScStIA PROF. LOUIS GUTTMAN Hebrew University in Jerusalem, American born, Guttman went. to Israel before the founding of; the new state in 1948. Part of his work there involved morale studies of the Israeli underground. army. He also helped found the Is- rael Institute of Applied Social Research, which began as a vol- unteer group in the underground; army. With the development of , the state of Israel, it expanded to provide research services to theE Israeli government and to pub-a lic institutions much like the Uni- versity's Institute for Social Re- search.- Apart from applied research, t Guttman has continued his inter-7 est in general methodology. In thet LA.' qI/ E iuqU'Y.i.vL t A.ti 0' v(., UElA %,'Ut.. Elv IU/OYt Socialism, Utopianism t P By CYNTHIA MILLS ture requires organization along industrial lines. Early exponents of socialismi and those who consider it outside Muncy explained that once so- of the framework of capitalism cialism has been achieved, work- are unrealistic; they are Utopians, ers will create a socialist industrial' Ralph Muncy, chairman of the union, then national, and finally State Centralist Committee of the a Socialist Industrial Union Con-, Socialist Labor Party, said re- gress. cently. World Peace At a discussion entitled, "Who He linked the establishment of Is the Utopian," sponsored by the socialism with social realism and Newman Center, he said that so- world peace. "The times call for cialism is no longer a dream. The social realism and the socialist necessary elements are present reconstruction of society if pro- to make it a realistic solution to gress is to be the law of the future the problems facing the world, he as it has been of the past," he added. asserted. 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. - Cinema French and German Screening Exam- Guild will present Henry James' inations for Doctoral candidates will "The Heiress" in Architecture be administered on Thurs., Dec. 10 Aud. from 3-5 p.m. in Aud. B, Angell Hall. Doctoral candidates must pass the SUNDAY, DEC. 13 screening examination before taking 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. - Cinema the written test in French or German, Guild will present Henry James' unless they have received B or better "The Heirss" n Arhiteturein French 111 or German 111. Those Aude Heiress" In Architecture who fail may take it again in February. Candidates are asked to bring their own No. 2 pencils. Recommendations for Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recommend tentative Dec. grad- uates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, for honors or high honors should recommend such wstudents byforwarding a letter (in 1 two copies: one copy for Honors Coun- cil, one copy for the Office of Regis- tration and Records) to the Director, Honors Council, 1210 Angell Hall, by 3 p.m., Mon., Dec. 28, 1964. Teaching departments in the School of Education should forward letters directly to the Office of Registration and Records, Room 1513 Administra- tion Bldg., by 8:30 a.m., Wed., Dec. 30, fps 1964. All Teacher's Certificate Candidates: Everyone receiving a teacher's certifi- cate must secure a health statement in the junior and senior years. This service will be free during the Janu- ary registration period only. There will be a charge at all other times. Plan FRIDAY, DEC. 11 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. - Cinema Guild will present Sternberg's "Anatahon" in Architecture Aud. SATURDAY, DEC. 12 S U UNCUE1r , ENToc. Peace Corps Placement Test will be held Mon., Dec. 7. at 3 p.m. at the downtown Post Office at Main & Catherine. INTERVIEWS: Bureau of Appoint- ments-Seniors & grad students, please call 764-7460 for appointments. TUES., DEC. 8- New York University Law School, N.YC.-Will interview any students in- terested in N.Y.U. law program. Finan- cial aid available including scholar- ships and loans. Brochure available at Bureau. Seniors should apply now. POSITION OPENINGS: Pitney-Bowes, Inc., Detroit - Sales Repres. Immed. opening for male grad with a min. of 2 yrs. sales exper. Resi- dent salesman for Ann Arbor area. Emery Air Freight Corp., Metro. Air- port, Mich.-Sales Repres. Trainee. Male grad for immed. opening for sales of transportation service. Exper. not req. Western Mich. territory.. Ingersoll Rand Co., Detroit - Sales Engrs. BS in ME or Rel. Engrg. field or exper. In mechanics. Under 35 yrs, for leading mfgr. of pneumatic & elec. power tools. For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB- Attn.: Students Interested in Camping -The director of Summer Placement Service is going to a meeting of camp directors Jan. 27-30 in Kansas City. Those who want their yellow or blue application cards shown to these di- rectors from Wis., Minn,, Ill., Mo., & Kansas, be sure to bring cards in to Rm. 212, Make Appointments Now. For additional information and ap- pointments, contact the Bureau of Ap-. pointments, Education Division, 3200 SAB, 764-7462. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of This Column foq Announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Canterbury House, Sunday snack, dis- cussion, "Church and Synagogue," a dialogue between Christianity' and Ju- daism, Sun., Dec. 6, 7:45 p.m., Canter- bury House, 218 N. Division. * * * Graduate Outing Club, Hiking and/or tobogganing, .2 p.m., Dec. 6, Rackham, Huron St. entrance. Guild House, Sunday Evening Sem- inar: "History of Christian Thought," Rev. Edwards, Dec. 6, 7-8 p.m.; Mon- day noon luncheon discussion, Rabbi Harold White, "Anti-Semitism in Mod- em Germany," Dec. 7, 12-1 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia Lunes de 3 a 5, 3050 Frieze Bldg. Cafe, con- versacion. * * * +Lutheran Student Chapel, Worship Services, Sun., Dec. 6, 9:30 and 11 a.m. Regents Get Gifts, Grants Of More Than $280,000 Prof. John Dempsey of the ProrJhn Demusptsey iencehe Refuting the need for a Marxist Dearborn campus poltical science social revolution, Dempsey sug- department, contended that Marx- gested that the widespread evils ism today is Utopian because of of capitalism-in Marx's period are its tenet that the achievement of no longer present. In fact, Marx's a Utopia on earth is possible. In criticisms of capitalism helped contrast, the Christian attempts eliminate many of those evils, he to achieve Utopianism, but does observed. not believe it can actually be realized on earth, he said. When asked whether this revo- Feasibility lution could take place without Discussing the feasibility of violence, Muncy replied: "Abso- socialism, Dempsey said that it is lutely." He cited the fact that it basic to Marxism that man is a 15i constitutionally legal for the product of his environment-thus citizenstof the UnitedaStates to man is perfectable. If one could change their present government achieve this 'perfection,' there upon finding it unsatisfactory. would not be any evil, he ex-l 1 >: i' I (Communion at 9:30); Sunday evening EDUCATION DIVISION: program, 7 p.m .,Lutheran Student The following is the list of schools Chapel, Hill and Forest. The Regents accepted $283,876.63 in gifts and grants at their No- vember meeting. Largest single grant of the 73 received was $163,795.10 from the Estate of Roy S. Campbell for the Michigan Alumni Fund. The Lilly Endowment Inc., In- dianapolis, Ind., gave $18,000 for the Lilly Endowment Fellowship in pharmacy. A grant of $13,381.73 was given by the American Cancer Society, Michigan Division, Lansing, for the Cancer Research Institute. The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, New York, gave $11,350 for the Sloan Foundation Graduate En- gineering Fellowships. $7,179 was given by the Ameri- can Medical Association Education and Research Foundation, Chi- cago, for its fund. A total of $5,140 was contribut- ed by the Lockheed Leadership Fund, Burbank, Calif., for the Lockheed Leadership Scholarship and for a supplementary scholar- ship. Alden B. Dow, Midland, gave $5,000 for the Institute for Social Research building fund. A partial distribution of the University's share of the Gladys K. Olsen estate amounted to $4,800. The American Cancer Society, New York, gave $4,200 for the American Cancer Society Fund. Securities amounting to $3,579 were accepted from the estate of Bessie White Kenyon to establish the Herbert A. Kenyon and Bessie W. Kenyon Trust Fund. The in- come will be used to purchase books relating to the theatre, stage and drama. The A. H. Robins Co., Inc., Richmond, Va., contributed $3,250 to establish the Robins Co. Ulcer. Study Fund. $3,000, was also received from the Parke, Davis and Co., Detroit, to establish the Analgesic Re- search Fund. a Another $3,000 was given by the estate of Francis L. Ware in full payment of thebequest in her will to establish the Frances L. Ware Cancer Research Fund. General Motors Corp., Detroit, gave $2,700 for the Flint College General Motors Scholarships. $2,505 was given by miscellan- eous donors for the Actuarial Science Program. $2,500 was received from the Humble Oil Education Foundation, Houston, Texas, to establish the Humble Oil Education Foundation Fund. Three gifts of $2,000 were re- ceived. They were from Consum- ers Power Co., Jackson, for the Thermonuclear Fusion Genera- tion fund; Lloyd Brothers, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio, for the Electro- lyte Research fund; and the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey, for the Robert G. Rodkey Grad- uate Fellowship and Scholarship Fund in banking and finance. $2,000 was also given by the Upjohn Co., Kalamazoo, for the Upjohn Research in Optics and Spectroscopy fund. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., New York, granted $1,200 for the Elec- tronic Computers Transaction Ed- itorship Fund. Mr. and Mrs. George Harnik, Tokyo, Japan, gave $800 to estab- lish the Louis F. Ferri Memorial Student Loan Fund for needy students. NOW i PROF. JEROME JELINEK plained. "I simply do not believe that man is perfect or can be made that way," he said. Marxists' Failure The failures in practice of the attempts to institute Marxism suggest that Marxism is incor- rect, he said. It has failed either because it needs revision and amendment or because its basic assumption that the motivations of all Marxists are purely noble is false. "I tend to believe in the truth of the latter." Referring to present day social- ism, Muncy said that it is real- istic, while the early socialists were unrealistic. Those elements necessary for it to exist are pres- ent, he added. Basic Tenets He outlined four basic tenets of socialism today: j -The means of production must be socially owned. This does not necessarily mean political owner- ship by the state; -Production must be carried on for use, not profit as in cap- italism; -Goods and useful services must be so distributed that each useful servant or worker gets the full value for his labor; and -The current economic struc- DIAL 8-6416 ti rr rw rrn rr rrrrrr.%+. uinminininin rrrrrmm rmm I I I U * U LOS OLVIDADOS 1 1 , LAST TIMES TONIGHT ! 1 p ! 1 1 ! "The Young and the Damned" is a vicious battle f 1 of desperate adolescent gangs driven by fear, hate * and hunger to fight blindly and with a vengeance. I I ! It was filmed with alarming realism, no punches t pulled, by Mexico's award-winning Luis Bunuel, * director of the surrealist experiment, Un Chien Andalou, shown at the CINEMA GUILD earlier this year. r 1 One of the ,most powerful of the classic films of * * juvenile delinquency, it won the Grand Prize for direction at the Cannes Film Festival. 1 ! 1 ! II IN THE ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM ! ! 1 I ADMISSION: FIFTY CENTS U Ua ! 1 rr rr rr r a rr rrr rr rr rrrirni rr rrr rr Lookig For A Unique Gift For Christmas? for parents--relatives--friends 44 "fgive a GLEE CLUB RECORD I' 1l4 only aauilable at the U of M CHRISTMAS SALES BEGIN DEC. 7th ., "White Tie and Tails" In the Fishbowl - "On Tour" 8 a.m.-4 p.m. I ___ SUBSCRIPTIONS 30% OFF 0 Mendelssohn Theatre-Mon. thru Fri. 10-1, 2-5 I "BRILLIANTI HILARIOUS I GAGS. GIGGLES, GUFFAWS AND SATIR ." The New York Times. Pietro Germi's SEDUGEEand A ALEREADE STRLINGPRSNAIN l DIAL 5-6290 Shown Today at 7 and 9 P.M. Only NOTE This Show Will Not Play Matinees some Saturday or women Sunday can't help themselves N.. . DANCE to RONNIE & The ietsters LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Wed. & Fri. 9 p.m.-1 :45 at the SCHWABEN INN 215 S. Ashley mere would always be men in her life... all kinds of men...and always Philip to come back to ...to degrade and despise. II :.r.®.... " . Continuous from 1 o'clock Saturday and Sunday I I ftm STATE DIAL Shows at 1 :00 662-6264 3:00-5:00-7:00 & 9:00 I GYPSY :. R . ; " s.