PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDIgESDAY. flFr.RivmvR !C insty PAGETWO HE ICHIAN fAM IV tF.11AAI.JSSAS I. SJ5Ek/.lJ~fl.2StV, 1004 CLEARANCE: Government Requires U' To Submit Information Detroit Faces Threat From Air Pollution 'THE GREAT BEAR': Hollander Views Stars, Snow, Movies (Continued from Page 1) ever been submitted for publica- tion by these organizations. Unlike private industrial con- tractors the University is required to submit "any information, derog- atory or otherwise, available to college and university officials or included in the personnel records of the college or university, that will aid a military department concerned in reaching a decision as to whether a clearance should be issued." Keeley said that his office rare- ly submits information not re- quired on the Personnel Security Questionnaire. Air Force Acts As Agent The Air Force is the supervising federal security agency for all University research except that of the Atomic Energy Commission. To Give Speech On Social Study Prof. Erving Goffman of the University of California at Berke- ley will speak on "The Study of Soiial Interaction" at 4:15 p.m., today in Aud. B. The lecture is one in a series of colloquia spon- sored by the psychology depart-. ment. Requests for clearance are sent to the Central Contract Manage- ment Region headquarters in Day- ton where the decisions are made. The Air Force Office of Special Intelligence investigates appli- cants. It can conduct two types of probes - a national agency check or a complete background check - depending on the appli- cant and the nature of the clear- ance he requests, G. M. Crane of the regional office explained. The former- is a check of crim- inal, subversive, military, immi- grant alien, veterans or passport records to find data on the appli- cant. All allegations are checked out, a Detroit Federal Bureau of In- vestigation agent said. "It is a thorough, complete and objective investigation," he declared. "The FBI makes no evaluations or recommendations. It lets the facts stand where they are," the agent declared. Report Results The results of the clearance ap- plication are reported to the vice president for academic affairs. Clearances are only granted at Dayton. Rejections are sent to Washington, D. C. for considera- tion by a defense department hearing board. The Air Force inspects top se- cret projects every two months and secret ones every four months. Keeley said that the lack of a clearance would not hurt a poten- tial career, but that a clearance would be an "added advantage" as he may be employable for secret projects. LEE STRASBERG ... drama coach S trasb erg To G*ive Talk Lee Strasberg, founder-director of the Actors' Studio and drama coach to many Broadway and Hol- lywood stars, will lecture at 3 p.m., Sunday in Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. He will discuss problems of di- rection and training in the con- temporary theatre. This is the sec- ond of the Professional Theatre Program's Distinguished Lecture Series. Strasberg is a noted advocate of the Stanislavsky method of thea- tre training in America. He is heading the forthcoming estab- lishment on Broadway of the Ac- tors Studio Repertoire Company. Admission price for the talk is $1.00 with discounts to APA mem-; bers. Tickets go on sale at tha Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre today. r -- """" r " DIAL 5-6290 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 P.M. By MICHAEL SATTINGER The Detroit area is suffering the worst air pollution in years, Prof. Arthur J. Vorwald, chairman of the Wayne State University in- dustrial health department, said yesterday. Speaking at a seminar on lung and heart diseases, Prof. Vorwald noted that we are on the verge of creating a hazardous and dan- gerous situation for asthmatics, for people with chronic bronchi- tis, tuberculosis, lung cancer, heart disease, and especially for the el- derly. The atmosphere has become loaded with hydro-carbons, car- bon dioxide, oxides of nitrogen, carbon monoxide and dust par- Vles, he explained. James B. Harrington of the en- Students Meet To Air Views On Co-op Life By ORVAL HUFF College students from through- out the Middle West were on the University campus last weekend attending the Mid-west Co-op Conference which met to discuss the advantages and problems of co-operative living. Participating in the conference were the University of Toronto, Ohio State University, Western Reserve University, Michigan State University, and the Univer- sity. "The post war period has brought about new roles in the co-op" Hayes Beall, Education- al Director of North American student Co-op League, said. "The role of the co-op today instills democratic principles, the sharing of work responsibilities, and ex- periences in purposeful living to the co-opers." Members Responsible "Co-ops are only as good as its members," Mrs. Elizabeth Les- lie of the Office of Student Af- fairs, expressed. "Members select the reasons for going the co-oper- ative way. They should be respon- sible to those in and outside of co-ops." "Successful co-ops are taken for granted, the unsuccessful ones are assumed to be typical," Wallace Campbell of North American In- surance in Columbus. Ohio and vice-president of CARE, said. "The co-op movement is the least un- derstood in the United States. Many successful co-ops are cred- it unions, group health associa- tions and CARE." Workshop Meetings Subjects under discussion at workshops were house manage- ment, personnel, group dynamics, development and expansion, the co-op movement, bookstores, food buying, and the Rochdale Prin- ciples of co-operative living. Insthe final summary session of the conference a resolution was passed that the Federal Housing Act be amended to include low cost, low interest, long range mortgages for student accommo- dations under the cooperative sec- tion of the act. Schultz To Lecture On Female Fish R. Jack Schultz of the Univer- sity museum will address a zo- ology department seminar on "Hybrid Combinations of an All- Female Fish" at 4:00 p.m. today in 1400 Chem. gineering school's Meteorological Laboratory said yesterday that the air pollution is a result of a high pressure area which did not move. "Since Nov. 29, the Detroit area has been near the center of a high pressure area, where little wind blows," he explained. When air pollution is not dispersed by winds, it tends to build up. "The situation is clearing up, because the high pressure area is beginning to move off," he said. Morton Sterling, chief of De- i troit's Air Pollution Control Bu- reau, agreed that present pollution was bad-eight times normal. De- troit usually benefits from cleans- ing winds, he said, but there has been little wind of late. Relatively Safe Detroit's relatively flat terrain makes the area less susceptible to the more severe pollution exper- ienced in river valleys, where smoke becomes trapped. Two of the worst cases were in Donora, Pa., and the valley of the Meuse River in Belgium. A number of people died when the air pollu- tion got out of control, he added. "When a stagnating high pres- sure is forecast for an area, the weather bureau sends out an air pollution alert. "If the warning is received, in- dustry could conceivably shtit down its more polluting opera- tions," Harrington continued. Views Legislation "Michigan as a state has very little air pollution legislation," he commented. "Most of the ordi- nances are originated by the cities and townships in which the prob- lem exists. These cities and town- ships then exercise controls over industry. "But they do not want to scare away industry with restrictions. Also, the city or township suffer- ing may not contain the cause of the pollution. "So the existing ordinances do not always solve the pollution problems," Harrington concluded. By MARTHA MacNEAL "We should not want to train ourselves to see it . . . even if it were there, such a great bear, all hung with stars, there still would be no bear." These are the closing words of "The Great Bear," a poem by Prof. John Hollander of Yale Uni- versity, who read examples of his work yesterday. This particular poem, he said, deals with the difficulty of apply- ing the abstract principles taught by others to the real situations that each individual faces in his life: "because there is no bear, we blame the picture." Tantalizing Mystery Another poem, "The Whole Story," deals with a tantalizing, unexplained suggestion made by Dr. Watson in a Sherlock Holmes short story. It seems there is some sort of mystery having to do with a lighthouse, a politician, and a trained cormorant. "Race Rock Light" also con- cerns a lighthouse, this one sur- rounded by plantings which re- mind Hollander of the garden of Eden: "the scene of that original dying dream." Now, the people keep "whatever gardens they need shut inside their own walls." "Digging It Out," an evocation of mood surrounding the effort of digging an automobile out of "sarcophagus mounds" of snow, is, in Hollander's own terms, "a little grim." "To call out some- thing in this snow would be to bury it h I don't want to have to die, snow or no snow . . . a To Hold Interviews For Committee The Literary College Steering Committee will hold an open meeting Thursday afternoon to interview students petitioning for positions on the committee. The meeting will take place from 4 to 6 p.m. in the first floor conference room of Angell Hall. rustle of no leaves comes somewhere." from Elegy "To the Lady Portrayed by Mar- garet Dumont" is an elegy written to a character in the Marx broth- ers movies who was played by Miss Dumont. In one of the movies, Groucho Marx hurls invective at the lady in question: "somebody ought to tear you down and put up a new building." In his poem, Hollander hopes that she will be borne "ever upward cloud by cloud" to a "fierce green land of mink and henna." Another poem started as a di- dactic for the instruction of a man whom Hollander feels has the wrong ideas about movie-making, but it "got out of hand." Among its rules are "stay for the second feature on a double bill always- it will teach you how to love," "do not forget the old places, for every- one's home has been a battle- ground" and "finally, remember always to honor the martyred dead; the forces- of darkness spread everywhere now." Symbolic Treatment "Humming" is a symbolic treat- ment of the buzzing of the 17-year cicada. After 17 years of dorman- cy, these insects are "free to breed for a week in the maple branches" and then they die. The particular incident of the poem is that of a car driven suddenly into a swarm of them and then out again: "somehow a seventeenth season of heat is always exploding in roses." As the car emerges, Hollander senses "the end of remembering happening somewhere ahead in the dust." Two rabbis, each intent on his own vision of life as a train car- ries them over a plain "not gray, not green" is the theme of "Two Meditative Landscapes." The poem involves a tragic joke. One rabbi insists that whenever you drop a piece of bread it always lands but- ter side down. The other, an "em- pirical" type, tries it; when he disproves the contention his friend cries "You fool, you're crazy, you buttered the wrong side!" and the empirical rabbi "wept, 'I know, I know.' " Hollander also read "Making It," "Riddle and Answer," and "Haly- con." "Making It" was written while Hollander was working on a longer poem which he has not yet finish- ed. "Making It" describes the dif- ficulty of writing something that "won't quite come." Hollander sees this problem in terms of the muse who, he feels, "will not help with poems until I make love to her." "Halycon" refers to a fountain of wine that was to have inspired poets. Hollander's poem of the same name treats the literal sit- uation of donating blood at a hos- pital in symbolic relationship to the mythical fountain. Once, at Columbia University, he discovered that a campus foun- tain functioned with a closed water system. He duly added sufficient quantities of detergent and grape juice to produce a reasonable fac- simile of the fountain. The poem megins "I mean some- day to cry out against the cities but first I must find the true ca- dence," and ends "I have bled since to many cadences . .. open- ing up at all is harder than meet- ing a measure." Set Disussion Of Attitudes Prof. E. Harold Swayze of the political science department will give the first of three talks on "At- titudes and actions Affecting Peace." Prof. Swayze will consider the attitudes and actions within the modern Soviet Uniin at 8 p.m. tonight in the Ann Arbor Public Library. The public talk is spon- sored by the Ann Arbor Women For Peace. U U DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4 t4 o 'Q G ooe NEWMAN CENTER 331 Thonpson LECTURE SERIES The Daily Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5 Day Calendar 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.-Office of Civil Defense and Mobilization, Department of Defense, Fallout Protection and De- sign Workshops. 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.-Mich. Health Council Conference on "Home Care in Mich."-Registration: 2nd Floor, Michi- gan Union. 3:00 p.m.-Dept. of Journalism Lec- ture Series on "First Hand Reports on the Ferment in Asia"-Ferdinand and Delia Kuhn, "The China-India Colli- sion": Rackham Lecture Hall, 4:00 p.m.-Dept. of Zoology Seminar- Dr. Jack Schultz, research associate, Museum of Zoology, "Hybrid Combina- tions of an All-Female Fish": Rm. 1400, Chemistry Bldg. 4:15 p.m.-Dept. of Psychology Collo- quium-Erving Goffman, Univ. of Cali- fornia, Berkeley: Aud. B, Angell Hall. 8:00 p.m.-Opera Dept., School of Mu- sic, Laboratory Opera-"Carmen": Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre. General Notices President Hatcher will speak at 3:00 p.m. on Fri., Dec. 7 in Hill Aud. This will bena report on his recent tour, and it will be sponsored by the Student Government Council. Cultural Activities Ticket Exchange: 12:30-5:00 daily this week holders of the League cultural activities tickets may exchange at the Mendelssohn Theatre box office for tickets to the Wed., Jan. 9 or Thurs., Jan. 10 per- formance of Pirandello's "Six Char- acters in Search of an Author." This is the final U-M Players show avail- able on the activities ticket. Last chance for exchange will be Mon-wed., Jan. 7-9. (Continued on Page 5) WED., DEC. 5-8 P.M. "Psychiatry and Religion" DR. ROBERT BAH RA, M.D. Meeting for graduate students immediately following. mm 1 You Asked For It! LIMITED SPACE Available on student charter to NEW YORK I ONLY $400 Round Trip DEC. 20 LV. UNION 6:30 P.M. LV. WILLOW RUN 7:30 P.M. AR IDLEWILD 9:30 P.M. JAN. 2 LV. IDLEWILD 6:00 P.M. AR. WILLOW RUN 8:00 P.M. AR. UNION 9:00 P.M. DC-7 Equipment.. . Dinner Served Aboard Special Buses Between Union and Willow Run Round Trip HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! Don't Be Disappointed WOLVERINE CLUB . . . Call NO 5-9250 ||. IU I I DIAL 2 Now 4 Shows Daily at 1:20-3:45-6:20 & 8:55 Feature 10 Mins. Later I I -I "Every one in the Ann Arbor area wants to find out what ever happen- ed to Baby Jane. Why don't you? The most talked about picture for 1962" I I I I U U U I I II