#.. ". six THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25. 1962 PROGRAMMED LEARNING: Create Center for Business Squeeze In East Quad Delicious Hamburgers 15c Hot Tasty French Fries 12c Triple Thick Shakes.. 20c 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. By JEAN TENANDER The Bureau of Industrial Re- lations has established a Center for Programmed Learning for Business, designed to acquaint the business community with the tech- nology of programmed learning. The Center was created to sup- ply industry with the opportunity to learn more about what pro- grammed learning can do and to train personnel in the technology of programmed learning. The pro- gram will be presented in a series of weekly workshops. "Until recently, most of the ac- tivity in the programmed learning fleld has been directed towardf or- mal education and it is difficult for industry - which has been quicker to realize the potentials of programmed learning - to get any straight answers. It is our objective to provide those 'an- - a. NO FINER BEER2 AT ANY PRICE swers', Geary A. Rummler, direc- tor of the workshops, said recently. Key Personnel During the past eight months the workshop has graduated more than 100 key personnel from over 70 business, industry and govern- ment organizations in five coun- tries. The workshops are directed at top-level executives concerned with the general areas of training, education and communications as well as toward line managers and staff specialists dealing with more specific training problems. While attending the course, theI participants actually program1 their own material. They are not subject to a barrage of lectures but are an active part of every learning exercise. The workshop format follows a sequential, programmed process of instruction. Some of the elements involved are, theory of shaping be- havior, basic procedures of pro- gramming, determination of ob- jectives for the programs and practicing programming with their own materials. Library Program One of the sample programs compiled by a student involved a plan to program instruct the cata- loguing of books in the General Library. At present the library suffers seriously from the loss of time incurred every year asnew staff is acquired. Since the turn- over in staff amounts to roughly 70 per cent, a faster method of instruction would be invaluable. Graduates of the workshop in- clude representatives from almost Beautiful Cloisonne Vases Hand Carved Ivory -' Hand Carved Screens SIndia Art Shop 330 Maynard (across from Arcade) ao - o c og-- o a tg-y every phase of industry and man- agement. In addition to the regu- larly scheduled workshops, the Center conducted a special week- long session exclusively for Feder- ated Department Stores. Having attended the seminars, graduates are able to advise man- agement on the feasibility of using programmed instruction in their organizations. They are capable of selecting wisely from commercial- ly prepared programmed instruc- tion and can hire their own pro- fessional instructors with assur- ance. "Perhaps one of the most unique aspects of the workshops and cer- tainly one reason for their con- tinued success is our faculty and our philosophy in selecting the faculty," Rummler said. We select only people who have had exper- ience in either writing or editing programmed material, he said. The University's Workshop for programmers is the only regularly scheduled one of its kind in the United States. Programmed learning in the business world may bring added efficiency to supply more direct means of communication. -Daily-Todd Pierce RECORD UNBEATEN-Some 160 men collected in Strauss House, East Quad, in an unsuccessful attempt to break Michigan State University's record of 230 men in a double room. Another try is scheduled for next week by Strauss and Greene men. ELECTION CAMPAIGN: Payne Sees Task of Representatives As Exploring Path's To Disarmament "There is no more important goal towards which a congressman can work than to seek, with other members of Congress and the ex- ecutive branch, a solution to the thorniest problems which face our nation today - the problems of finding a path out of the present arms race," Democratic candidate for Congress Thomas P. Payne said last night. _ He said the questions which re- quire study and eventual solution IlI' E & 8 Brewing Co.,inc. Detroit 7, Mich. _ I -- \ a include: How can we develop arms control plans which will reduce international tensions and, at the same time, maintain our national security? How can we make significant reductions in our cm rent level of defense spending which now ex- ceeds $50 billion per year without severe economic hardship to mil- lions of citizens? Problems Insoluble Payne said that "if we maintain, as many of our present congress- men do that these problems are insoluble, then we are admitting that we, along with the rest of the world, are on a collision course with nuclear disaster." "What is required," Payne said "is a recognition by Congress that this is a vital problem and that its solution is worth every bit of Chicele To Talk On English History Prof. Habakkuk Chicele of the economic history department at Oxford University and fellow of All Souls College will speak on "The English Aristocracy in the 18th Century" at 4:10 p.m. in Rackham Aud. ti effort and expense which may be required." Payne asserted that "up to now Congress has been stingy with peace." He said that $6 5 million has currently been appropriated for one year's operation of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. "The congressman s e ek i n g peace can support those programs which seem to offer hope in this area. He can vote support for the Peace Corps and the Arms Control Agency. He can work with other members of the House, Senate and the executive branch towards solu- tions -"to the problems of economic dislocatio which would result from major reductions in defense spending." Payne said that a congressman can "show his support of the non- military needs of our people-the need for better education, for bet- ter housing, for solutions to the complex problems of our urban areas and humane treatment of! our elderly citizens. "A congressman can be aware and show that he is aware of the great desire on the part of our people to find a successful way to turn the arms race into a peace' race," he said. Accepts Plan For Change In Gargoyle By MARTHA MacNEAL "When the Board in Control of Student Publications accepted our plan for a new Gargoyle, they also accepted the whole new phil- osophy which we presented," John Dobertin, '64, said last night. The new philosophy is one of "humor without vulgarity." "The old Gargoyle folded in 1960 not only because the staff had only one person willing to take a sen- ior position, but also because its humor had become an in-group 'expression, without wide appeal," he continued. According to Dobertin, the new Gargoyle is here to stay. To help insure its longevity, he has in- itiated and will continue a recruit- ing program based on personal contact with campus groups. Last year he spoke in several housing units, and the staff for this year numbers over 40 persons. Each issue of Gargoyle will fea- ture one guest writer and one guest cartoonist. For the first issue, Victor Borge will contribute a column and either Charles Addams or Charles Schultz will also contribute. In format each issue of the mag- azine will be divided into sections of international, national, state, and campus humor. 'Ihe theme of of the first issue, will be "What Is Humor?" and will. "explain Gar- goyle and give an Idea of our fu- ture plans," Dobertin said. One continuous feature will con- sist of "O Henry Twist" stories- stories with surprise endings in the style of the American author. The senior staff consists of Dobertin, editor-in-chief; Stuart Goodall, '63, business manager; Roger Goldman, '63 BAd, advertis- ing manager; Lynne i'riedrich, '63, managing editor, and Aleksis Lah- ti, '63 A&D, art editor. Mandatory Registration The following is a list of courses for which students must pre-reg- ister this fall in order to be en- rolled in them: ACCOUNTING: 271, 272. .ANTHROPOLOGY: 101, 222, 331, 428. ASIAN STUDIES: 101, 102. ASTRONOMY: 111, 112. BOTANY: 101, 102, 103, 422, 433, 468, 483. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: 306. CHEMISTRY: 102-106, 191, 194, 221- 223, 266, 346, 447. ECONOMICS: 104. EDUCATION: A301, A325, A330, C300, D326, D327. ENGLISH: 124, 225, 228, 231, 232, 269, 350. FAR EASTERN STUDIES: 212, 422. FRENCH: 102, 222, 231, 232, 361. GEOGRAPHY: 411, 424, 444. GEOLOGY: 112, 219, 280. GERMAN: 101, 102, 231, 232, 236. GREAT BOOKS: 201, 202. HISTORY: 101, 102, 331, 332. HISTORY OF ART: 101-103. ITALIAN: 102. LATIN: 102, 221, 222, 231, 232. MATHEMATICS: 234. MUSIC: 341-343. PHILOSOPHY: 102, 231, 233, 234, 263, 267, 269. PHYSICS: 106, 125, 126, 145, 146. POLITICAL SCIENCE: 100, 110. PSYCHOLOGY: 100-102, 110, 192, 500, 501. SOCIOLOGY: 100, 103, 380, 435, 445, 467. SPANISH: 102, 222, 231, 232, 361. ZOOLOGY: 101, 252, 282, 364, 422, 424, 426, 428, 437, 440, 452. If a student wishes to elect any one of these courses, he must pre- register his entire program, wheth- er or not his other courses are included in this list. The student's course elections will then be sent to the Office of Registration and Records, and will remain valid unless an insoluble time conflict develops. Four Students Demand Writ Four students of the University of California's Riverside campus have asked for a writ of manda- mus against the Regents of the university, President Clark Kerr and Riverside Chancellor Herman T. Speith. The suit arose out of Speith's refusal to allow Dorothy Healy, a member of the Southern Cali- fornia Communist Party to speak on the Riverside campus. The state supreme court ruled that it would not take cases in- volving freedom of speech on di- rect appeal from a superior court. The students, members of Del- lare, a liberal organization at Riverside, have now appealed to the California Fourth District Court. They attacked the ban on the ground that it is a denial of their basic freedoms under the California constitution. 1_ N "mg- ifMEN .- , - You have (or will have) your Ph.D. or Master's Degree YOU MAY FIND THAT A MOVE TO MARTIN WILL BE A MOVE UP IN YOUR CAREER,... A MOVE AHEAD TOWARD SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENT Important Martin positions for PHYSICISTS, ENGINEERS, APPLIED MA THEMA TICIANS and SCIENTISTS with advanced degrees in: i AERONAUTICAL OR ASTRONAUTICS PHYSICS, NUCLEAR PHYSICS a SCIENCE Dynamics Analysis Magnetohydro- dynamics Flutter, Turbulence CIVIL Elasticity and Plasticity Random Loading Fluid Dynamics Wave Phenomena Re-entry Heating Problems Plate and Thin-shell Structures Hypersonic-Rarefied Gas Flow Energy Conversion (Thermionic & Magnetohydro- dynamics) Electron Optics Infrared Cryogenics Acoustic Power Prediction Advanced Reactor Studies Underwater Acoustics Thinfilms Radioisotope Fueled Generator Devel- opment CHEMISTRY (Physical-Organic) Non-equilibrium or Aero-chemical aspects of very hi- speed flight ?Radiochemistry Hi-temp chemical reactions ELECTRICAL OR ELECTRONICS Experimental Stress Analysis of Struc- tures at Elevated Temperatures Solid State Devices Kinetics of reaction Plastics Information Theory Semi-Conductor Studies Advanced Communi' cation Systems Studies Automatic Control Systems Aerospace Vehicle Electrical Power Distribution Systems PROPULSION & THERMODYNAMICS Fluid Dynamics of multi-phase gases Liquid Rocket Studies MATHEMATICS (Appl Data Processing Solid State Circuitry Infrared Microwave Guidance & Navigation Visual Presentation Systems Cryogenics Propagation Problems Command & Control Plasma Microwave Interactions Energy Conversion (Thermoelectric) Classical Mechanics Orbital Mechanics Systems Evaluation of Reactors METALLURGY Hi-temp Materials Solid-State Devices EXPERIMENTAL OR Advanced Space Propulsion Systems Mechanical Aspects of Advanced Reactors rled) Theory of Dynamic Programming Systems Optimiza- tion & Nonlinear Methods Advanced Welding Joining Techniques Wave Propagation in Solids Plasma Microwave Interactions Guidance & Adaptive Control Processes Radiation heat transfer problemru Environmental Systems (ultra- high vacuum) Digital Logic & Adaptive Processes Random Signal Theory Studies Interplanetary Trajectories Effects of Metal- lurgical Structures (Creep & Stress Rupture behavior of super-alloy and refractory metals) ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS -NOVEMRER R Q >, fy1 :.; <'4 : .. ::>;r¢ u "t::: ::