TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1962 TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1,1962 IN ANN ARBOR: Ask Civil Defense Speed-Up Economist Tells Criteria For Indian Investment (Continued from Page 1) Washtenaw County qualifies for of shielding from radiation. Ac- funds for shelter equipment. cording tor the Washtenaw County Miller said that the county of- office of civil defense, "studies fice encourages the building of . .indicate that shelter space private shelters by issuing pam- meeting this lower standard would phlets written by the federal civil save lives in large areas of the defense office. country not exposed to the most 6) The defense department "has intense radiation. authorized the use of stand-by ) 2 "About 10,000 box cars of military reservists on a voluntary shelter supplies can be installed basis for civil defense service at over the next six months with the request of civil defense author- adequate local cooperation." The ities." county will probably receive such Refuse Request supplies. Locally, the Ann Arbor Board of Rural Areas Education turned down a request 3) "The base has been laid for on Thursday from the Ann Arbor an intensified effort to provide office of civil defense to allow technical civil defense help in licensing of spaces as fallout shel rural areas, particularly on in- ters in six public schools and the expensive shelters for people, and Ann Arbor Public Library. on methods for protecting live- One reason the request was stock and crops against fallout." refused is because the board said 4 Thefndra iildfenselof-.the shelters did not provide ade- 4) The federal civil defense of- quate protection and therefore fice is establishing workshops would give a false sense of secur- throughout the country to trainw iy.I addlsin eobudn architects, engineers and con- ity. In addition, the buildings tractors in the "technique of lo- would have been open to the eating shielding in buildings and public. in improvising shelters." The city's policy, according to inthrespengtsh tr ningRobert Shipman, director of the With respect to such training, Ann Arbor office of civil defense, the architecture and design col- is to "utilize the capabilities it lege offers a course in analyzing now has by using buildings that the structure of defense shelters. have basements." Matching Funds Official List 5) The civil defense office has Shipman said an official list of authorized the expenditure of buildings that would be used in matching funds for purchase of time of disaster would be made supplies and equipment for local public soon. He added that the centers. According to Miller University has "buildings and tun- nels" that would provide for "more people than the total student body." Shipman estimated that within two or three months, enough buildings would be available for Dial 8-6416 civil defense purposes to offer protection to everyone in Ann Continuous Today Arbor. The new city hall, still under From 1 A.M. construction, will offer shelter to all its city employees, but not to .IRuII x u the general public. According to VNIKI1 Shipman, the basement will have a protection factor of 1000, which BA N N E D that "a person would be IN ITS COUNTRY 1000 times as safe in the building OF ORIGIN as out on a hill." Protection Factor "THIS Is Ostafin said that the Univer- "HS sity had shelter facilities that have UNQUESTIONABLY a protection factor of 100. According to Shipman, the city's A GREAT PICTURE civil defense program costs the Ann Arbor resident about $13,000 a year. This money is used for "A REMARKABLE P'ECE OF MOVIE "THE PERFECT GIFT MAKING" FOR EVERYONE" Herald Tribune ... Makes the orgy in 'La Dolce Vita' look like a family picnic" -N.Y.Daly News Grand Prix Winner 0 1961 Cannes Festival0 LUIS BUNUEL'Sd LVIRIDIANA from IE~ MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE 322 South State Street Coming NO 3-3371 "LES LIASONS OPEN SATURDAY DANGEREUX' AFTERNOONS UNTIL CHRISTMAS - paying the salaries of Shipman and his secretary and radiation measurement equipment.1 Although Ann Arbor has had a1 civil defense program since the 1930's for protection against fires and tornadoes, the office of civil1 defense director was not created by the city until 1958. Write Document The director is responsible for the writing of "The Operational1 Survival Plan for Ann Arbor," a 234-page document, outlining the facilities and personnel availableE to the civil defense office and their functions in the event of an emergency.t The plan is put into effect upon the declaration of emergency by the governor. The Ann Arbor po- lice receive warning of an attack. from the Washtenaw County sher-; iff. All city government depart-; ments, boards, commissions and institutions are then pressed into civil defense service. The communications officer, a representative of a telephone com- pany, is responsible for maintain-, ing communications between the city and the state control center. According to a summary of the plan, "a pool of radio facilities and circuits is made up to the maximum extent possible from existing radio services." Record Information The policy department is re- sponsible for receiving, recording and evaluating information re- ceived from all sources and for providing information for the civil defense director so he will be able to make decisions. The police would also have the job of regulating traffic along es- tablished routes, preventing sabo- tage and subversive activities and providing "light rescue operations and radiological monitoring." According to a summary of the plan, "an auxiliary police squad is now being trained to supple- ment our existing police fore" The job of giving medical aid and supplementing it' with such essentials as clothing, food and housing would be given to the Washtenaw County welfare, health and medical departments in case of an enemy attack or natural disaster. Explains Tra By Students I By BARBARA LAZARUS "An undergraduate preparing for law school must read materials for his courses in a critical way rath- er than just assimilating and be- ing spoon-fed facts," Prof. Stew- art Law of the George Washington University Law School said Wed- nesday. Speaking on "Training for Law" as a part of an information pro- gram for pre-legal students, Prof. Law added that the ability to par- Con ferences To Consider f Y as a w *Lb By THOMAS DRAPER Criteria for investment in the Indian economy were discussed by Prof. Arnold C. Harberger of the University of Chicago Thursday at a meeting of the University Economics Society. Prof. Harberger, back from a year in India, said that it is neces- sary to establish criteria because one half of the investment is in the public sector of the newly developing Indian economy. The total productivity and ben- efit of a public project should be used as criteria for investment, rather than the private return on capital, Prof. Harberger explained. Dual Role The productivity of capital has a dual role for investment deci- sion, Prof. Harberger said. It is a measure of the contribution of additional investment to economic growth, and it is a criterion for project evaluation. "The current rate of productiv- ity demanded of power and ir- rigation projects is in the order of three-five per cent per year. If this is an accurate measure of the social productivity of capital then capital must be a negligible factor in economic growth," Prof. Harberger said. The typical quality of the un- skilled labor in India would imply a low productivity of labor, he said. If the productivity of labor was assumed to be zero, the pro- ductivity of capital would be in the neighborhood of 30 per cent per year. Analysis Assumption In his analysis, he assumed that the productivity of labor is re- flected by wages. Then the produc- tivity of capital ranged from 10-17 per cent. He said that the immobility of labor is a major problem of the Indian economy. "A farmer who does not own his land makes around 200 to 300 rupees. A rickshaw driver (an occupation requiring a minimum of skill) in the city receives 500 to 600 rupees." Suspicion Prof. Harberger said that there was a tremendous suspicion on the part of Indian intellectuals towards the price mechanism. He ning Needed Entering Law cited historical and intellectual grounds for this view. "For a hundred years prior to independence the Indian economy had a freely operating price mech- anism. During this time it did not achieve a substantial increase in the per capita income. "Indian intellectuals were train- ed at a certain time and at a certain place. Although Fabian economics lost acceptance in Eng- land during the 40's, it has deep roots in India." He said that many actions taken by India start to make sense when viewed with respect to mild- socialism economics. He said that one specific result of this philos- ophy is the general belief that profits are immoral. Bullard Notes Middle East Vulnerability "Today in the Middle East there are many small states, each hav- ing its own hopes and fears and capable of being easily hurt," Sir Reader Bullard, former member of the British Foreign Service and former director of Commonwealth Studies at Oxford University, said Thursday. Speaking on "The Middle East and West Since 1945," Bullard not- ed that among the most important problems of the Middle East to- day are those of foreign affairs and economics. "Some states are extremely poor, while others have great wealth from resources such as oil," Bul- lard said. Provincial Proficiency He maintained that democratic government in the Middle East may be far in the future, but young people can practice government operation at a provincial level. In local government they can attain proficiency in practical affairs and not depend on mere oratory. "The formation of voluntary so- cieties, offering information on various aspects of national gov- ernment and accomplishing some needs of society which government cannot meet, is another means of practicing for democratic govern- ment," Bullard went on. It is a mistake to think that if a country draws up a framework for democratic government, it will nec- essarily be established, he said. An attitude for democracy is also needed; and of all Middle Eastern governments, only Turkey has made a serious attempt to estab- lish something like democracy, Bullard explained. Speaking on the 1955 Suez crisis, Bullard said that the refusa of the United States and Great Britain to help Egypt build the Aswan Dam infuriated Premier Gamal Abdul Nasser. Even if the British had reached some settlement, it could have been repudiated by Egypt as sign- ed under duress, he added. Toward Democracy "The Persian government has not advanced far towards attain- ing a democracy. But one law, now in the process of being put into ef- fect by the agriculture minister, is a step in the direction of democ- racy," he noted. It requires the breaking up o large estates and will help narrow the gap between rich and poor Bullard explained. "Such progres in a country which has been so slow in developing is very impor tant." Views Need. To Examine Moral Ideas BY DIANE GAC "It is both necessary and desir- able that higher education be con- cerned with searching out and ex- amining moral issues," Prof. Wil- liam W. Jellema of the education school said Wednesday in one of a series of lectures sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs. ' Prof. Jellema defined a moral issue as a choice between two or more alternatives which demands personal decision that cannot be based on facts alone and which has future consequences for one- self or for other men. "The ability to perceive moral issues and to make decisions about them is essential to man's human- ity," he said. "Education ought to be concerned with making a man a full man.", Not Fully Human Education that does not teach morals can produce an intelligent being who is something less than fully human, he added. There are other reasons for the need of a moral education. Prof. Jellema pointed out that intensive study and research in any seem- ingly non-moral field create and re-discover moral issues. For instance, through scientific research, nuclear weapons have been evolved, and the moral issue of war is not only revived but magnified in scope and conse- quences, he said. Decision Incapability Never has moral decision been so important as in our technical age, yet never has man seemed to be so incapable of making de- cisions, according to Prof. Jelle- ma. Technology has weakened tra- ditional morality by bringing man closer to the difference in moral codes in other parts of the world, he explained. Rapidtechnical advance has exaggerated in the modern gen- eration an already impoverished sense of history, Prof. Jellema maintained. To the adolescent, the way of life and the moral princi- ples of the past generation are ob- solescent; to him the parental model is not so much wrong as irrelevant. Prof. Jellema expressed impa- tience with the type of academic objectivitiy which is sterile and static, saying that the men of the academic world should show them- selves to be men of conviction. Group To Host Detroit Church The Protestant Foundation for International Students will host 50 members of a Detroit Negro church t in Ann Arbor today. The visitors, who will be guests of local church members, have been invited as a reciprocal ges- ture stemming from the Detroit Negro church's invitations to Uni- versity international students in the past few years. Kloetzli To Speak On Urban Matters The Lutheran Student Center and Chapel will present a series of lectures by the. Rev. Dr. Walter f Kloetzli, secretary of urban church v planning for the National Luther- , an Council. He will speak on "Urb- s an Renewal" at 12:15 p.m. today and on "You and the Urban Chal- lenge" at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the chapel. CHEMISTRY: Pharmacy College Initiates Program By PHILIP SUTIN The pharmacy college this year, inaugurated a program leading to a bachelor of science degree in medicinal chemistry. The new program differs from the standard pharmacy program in that it requires four years of study instead of the standard five and that it substitutes more the- oretical chemistry and physics courses for practical pharmacy courses, Dean Tom D. Rowe of the pharmacy college explained. The program substitutes a year of mathematics, physical chemis- try and a language as well as a course in organic qualitative chem- ical analysis for some pharmacy requirements and drops such practical courses as pharmaceuti- cal management, he said. Not Qualifying Dean Rowe noted that this pro- gram does not qualify students to take the state pharmaceutical ex- aminations necessary to become a registered pharmacist. Noting that this is the only such program in the country, Dean Rowe declared that it "should strengthen the position of the col- lege in the area of medicinal chem- istry." He said this study is concerned with the relationship and inter- action between drugs and human chemical and biological mechan- isms. Other Aims It also attempts to correlate the relationship between chemical structure and biological activity and the physical properties of drugs, he explained. TOM ROWE ... new program l SEXY? (No-just funny) TRUMAN CAPOTE'S COMEDY HIT THE GRASS HARP presented by ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE Dec. 6, 7, 8 - Trueblood Theatre - 8:00 p.m. Box office (NO 3-6470) opens Monday Thurs. $1.50 Fri.-Sat. $1.75 DIAL 2-6264 ENDS TODAY Feature starts: at 1:00-3:00-5:05 7:10 and 9:25 The personal story behind that survey... from the controversial best-selling novel. SNM NI KOS AMU U ERR BRBMIt MIRE MOM GOOK TECHNICOLOR' . UMMULUSM The state Council for Social Studies, the Bureau of School Services and Extension Service are sponsoring a conference today, called "Teaching About Commu- nism." The conferees will register at 8:45 a.m. today, adjourn at 11:45, meet again at 2 p.m., and adjourn at 3:45. The four simultaneous confer- ences, meeting on the fourth floor of the Rackham Bldg., are "The Geography and People of the So- viet Union," by Prof. George Kish of the geography department; "The Economics of Communism," by Prof. Alexander Eckstein of the economics department; "The Ide- ology of Communism," by Prof. Frank Grace of the political sci- ence department; and "The Gov- ernment of the Soviet Union," by Prof. William B. Ballis, director of the Russian studies center. At a Michigan League noon luncheon, Senators Stanley G. Thayer (R-Ann Arbor) and Thom- as F. Schweigert (R-Petoskey) and members of the state department of public instruction will discuss the teaching of Communism. ticipate back and forth with your courses is an essential one for fu- ture lawyers. Recommending that students take any courses which will help them write clearly and simply, Prof. Law said that "the Perry Masons you will meet are very few, and far more of your legal work will involve well organized writ- ing which allows people to under- stand what you are trying to say." Forensic Ability Speaking ability, however, is still important and students should take courses in college which al- low them a chance to express themselves before their fellow stu- dents. "Any chance on campus to get involved in forensic activity will aid future lawyers in learning to express a point to an audience," he added. Courses in such fields as his- tory, economics or political sci- ence offer a good basic background for lawyers. "Usually most people at the top top of the field have good backgrounds 'in other things than just law. You should pursue other interests in various departments and not merely treat them as ob- stacles to a degree," Prof. Law said. Accounting Accounting is a necessary part of a pre-legal student's back- ground, since often lawyers are called upon to analyze figures from an accountant's point of view, he added. Speaking on what law schools demand of students, Prof. Law said that "law schools will demand ar innate intellectual ability. Law is a relatively intellectual field, and in practice you will meet some 01 the finest minds in your life." Law school will also demand the ability to work at a-harder pace than in undergraduate years. I1 will require a student to have or- ganizational ability, seriousness o: purpose and self - discipline, he said. %mop"w4moop, T S f s i s f e e f e No one under 16 will be admitted- unless accompanied by an adult. .. t Complete Script of BARTHOLOMEW FAIR in GENERATION ON SALE IN THE LOBBY DURING PERFORMANCE .--,.. DOORS 11% 1 1t11I I1tI t t1 OPEN 12:45 - \ n\n1 n~it il 'aI iD 4 Shows Daily at 1:20-3:45-6:20 and 8:55 - Feature as BARTHOLOMEW FAIR TONIGHT: SOLD OUT (Only a Few Seats Available for this Afternoon at 2:30) LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE S. G. C e e TONIGHT and Sunday at 7 and 9 EARLY COMEDY AND DRAMA Settled at the Seaside, The Lion and the Souse, Friends, I Gin erna qui/4 Prmie&' Cinema Guild announces at this time some of the outstanding films scheduled for showing next semester. VERIDIANA by LUIS BRUNUEL I'M ALL RIGHT JACK ON THE WATERFRONT STALAG 17 THE CAINE MUTINY THE LAW IS THE LAW FROM HERE TO ETERNITY GRAND ILLUSION GUN FIGHT AT OK CORRAL START ING SUNDAY 10 Mins. Later liONMME as the picture to inaugurate the HOLLYWOOD neview ENGA MeNT Bette Davisand Joan Crawford ENDING TODAY MICHIGIN DIAL 5-629 0 Shows Today at 1, 3, 5, 7:05, 9:10 A STORY OF CHRISTIANITY JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents CORNELWILDE ELINDA LEE ON StANTINE . THEROSS 1 Elm.