THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY* SEPTEMBER 19, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY% SEPTEMBER 19,1963 VEFITS: 'U' Heating Plant Expands IRB To Undertake anti-Bias Proj eels 'BREAK HOSTILITY': Tutorial Project Assists Negro Children By ROBERT SELWA uident Government Council's .an Relations Board will be erned this year with racial imination and foreign stu- a planning session earlier this the HRB discussed ways to ier the education of students t discrimination, to improve ontacts between American and ,archers Kear eport Machine-tool and metalworking dustries in Europe and Australia pend heavily on collegiate and )vernment basic research, while merican industry uses private re- arch and demands more imme- .ate ' results, research directors' omn nine nations reported recent- at the Conference on Produc- on. Research Abroad., "The amount of fundamental search being done in. European aiversities and institutes in sup- >rt of these industries certainly very much larger than in sim- ar institutions in the United ates," Frank R. Bacon, head of dustrial Development Research - the Institute of Science and echnology, asserted. Though American firms may be eglecting basic research in favor applied research, Bacon suggest- s that Europe may be overbal- iced the other way. "In viewing day's very rapid technological ivances we should try to deter- ine how much of each type of search we should be doing.", Vice-President for Academic Af- ,irs Roger W. Heyns said the Iiversity is seeking to contribute industrial development in Mich- an. "We are trying to define hat role the University should .ay in helping to solve the prob- in. "I believe the University can mly be useful by being vigilant 1 finding ways to preserve the )nditions of discovery which ake possible the development of ew knowledge. We must preserve iese c'onditions, and society as a hole must help us," Heyns said. foreign students on campus and to work in the Ann Arbor com- munity. Ann Arbor's fair housing ordi- nance, passed Monday by City Council, came under scrutiny and board members suggested that the HRB help students gain the pro- tections of the ordinance. Board members expressed re- gret that the ordinance would not take effect until January 1, point- ing out that most students who are going to move between semesters will have moved by that time. It was suggested, however, that the HRB work as observer with stu- dents searching for housing. Recalling the success of "Proj- ect Welcome" two years ago, board members examined ways to do it again in housing and other areas. The project involved the signing by students of petitions welcoming residence seekers regardless of face, religion or nationality. Some 3500 signatures were obtained. The HRB also examined the use of educational tools-lectures, mo- vies, panels, discussion groups, "role playing"-to promote under- standing about human relations. The HRB is also seeking the use in freshman English classes of excerpts from the writings of James Baldwin. A new chairman will be elected at next week's meeting because of the resignation of David Aroner '63. Voice Elects New Leader Nancy Hollander, '65, has been elected chairman of Voice Politi- cal Party. Barbara Steinberg, '64; Stan Na- del, '65; Barry Bluestone, '64; Richard Shortt, '66; Carol McEl- downey, '64, and Robert Martin, Grady won posts on its executive. committee. Miss McEldowney, Todd Gitlin, Grad; Rennie Davis; Grad; Ken McEldowney, Grad, and Richard Flacks, Grad, outlined Voice's five general areas of concern for the coming year: local civil rights, na- -Daiy-Mark Diem HEATING PLANT-The University heating plant, which supplies hot water, steam and electricity to the main campus, the hospital complex and the residence halls, has recently acquired a new gas boiler. Previously all boilers have been coal-operated. The plant is presently assembling the new boiler, which should go into operation by Nov. 1. ADMISSIONS: Hutchins Reveals Prejudice at Chicago By DAVID BLOCK The Ann Arbor Tutorial Project concentrates on providing educa- tional training for children of grade school and high school ages, according to staff member Miriam Olshanski, '66. The children, primarily Negro, are given assistance in developing their reading and arithmetic skills. The project, part of the Culture Club, will hold a mass meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 3D of the Michigan Union. Second Purpose "We hope our tutorial project will serve a second purpose by breaking down the hostility that many of these children feel to- wards the white community," Miss Olshanski said. "First, we hope to gain their confidence by demonstrating our willingness to help them by means of the project. "Then, because our program is constructed on a highly individual basis, with only one student per tutor, we hope our staff members will form friendships 'with their pupils and thus further strengthen the bonds between the two com- munities," she added. Orientation Program The tutors are mainly students at the University and must first go through a two week orientation program before they are permitted to begin work with a pupil. They must put in a minimum of two hours of work per week for the project. The organization is headed by its co-ordinator, Richard Sleet, a former student. The faculty ad- viser of the group is Stanislav V. Kasl, study director of the Sur- vey Research Center. In addition, several clergymen in the area are serving as advisers to the tutorial project. Wallace Gets, Council Post Dean James B. Wallace of the music school was among 15 per- sons appointed yesterday by Gov. George Romney to the new Michi- gan Council for the Arts. The council replaces the former Michigan Cultural Commission. Wallace and Jacob Kellman, De- troit civic leader, were named vice-chairmen of the council. Among others named were Prof.- Emeritus Joseph E. Maddy of the music school, president of the in- terlochen National Music Camp, and Alden Dow, Midland architect. The student group is also aided by a committee comprised of the parents of the tutees and other in- terested Ann Arbor residents. The committee conducts door-to-door campaigns in an attempt to arouse public awareness of the tutorial project. Committee members urge Magnuson Directs Russian Survey Dr. Harold J. Magnuson, direc- tor of the University's Institute of Industrial Health, is chairman of a six-man United States delega- tion beginning a one-month study of Soviet industry, particularly in the area of industrial toxicity. CT1 A lIr' TODAY _______ Evenings & Sunday $1.25 Matinees Till 5 P.M. $1.00 the parents of slow children to en- roll them in the project's program. Every two weeks the parents committee meets with members of the project to discuss their pro- gress and to plan future actions. The tutors keep written records of their meetings with their pupils. Simultaneously, a staff of the tutorial project is conducting individual research on the prob- lems relating to civil rights and the tutorial program. At the end of the year these two sets of re- ports will be compiled into a gen- eral report outlining the results and conclusions for the project. Miss Olshanski urged all people interested in being tutors or staff members in this program to come to the mass meeting today. SHOWS AT 1:00-4:30 AND 8;00 WINNER OF' 7 ACADEMY AWARDS !a BEST PIC3PFTHE TEARI SANTA BARBARA-The Uni- versity of Chicago has come under fire in a recent essay by former Chancellor Robert M. Hutchins. In an "Occasional Paper" in a periodical publication for the Fund for the Republic, of which Hutch- ins is president, the educator charged that during his stay at Chicago there were instances of prejudice at both the student and faculty level. "The University of Chicago Medical School violently resisted admitting Negro students," Hutch- ins wrote. "Negroes and Jews who had non-committal names and were not otherwise visible to the naked Show To View Slang, Jargon eye were detected in photographs required with applications for ad- mission. It took an executive or- der from my office to eliminate this requirement." He said that on another occasion the chairman of a scientific de- partment told him the school could not appoint a leading theoretical astronomer "because he was an Indian and black." Hutchins also criticized the gen- eral moral tone of academic life and the state of liberal education. Repudiate Snow He said he wished to "repudiate C. P. Snow, who intimates in one of his books that scientists should be intrusted with the world be- cause they are a little bit better than other people. "My view vased on long and painful observation is that profes- sors are somewhat worse than oth- er people, and that scientists are somewhat worse than other profes- sors. "The foundation of morality in our society is a desire to protect one's reputation. A professor's rep- utation depends entirely on his books and his articles in learned journals, he continued. Victims of Education "Scientists are the victims of an education and a way of academic life created by their misinterpre- ters and propagandists," Hutchins said. "These misinterpreters have propagandized an entirely incon- secutive chain of consecutive prop- ositions. The pursuit of truth, they say, is the collection of facts. Facts can be experimently verified. Thus the only method of truth is the scientific method." He cited the University of Chi- cago Medical School as an exam- ple of a perfectly sincere "although somewhat misguided campaign against liberal education." He said the medical school urg- ed devotion of the entire curricu-; lum to science and medicine. He said the consequence is that "everybody specializes." "There can be no academic com- munity because scientists cannot talk to one another," he added. 1 Colum bia Pictures .pe en s'e SAM SPIEGEL OAVID LEAN Production of OFAIIAIAL "rurxO ALEC GUINNESS"ANTHONY QUINNJACK HAWKINS JOSE FERRER ANTHONY OUAYLE cLAUoE RAINS ARTHUR KENNEDY oMAR sHARw *PETER O'TOOLE tAWRtENi( cm e~n.. ;;w.f tos.. nxa%6 crwt - . ROBERT 5017.- SAM SPIEEL " DAVID LEAN - TECtIMOOR tional civil rights, Universit form, student welfare and programs. SGC i ,,;' - > ', petitioning WILL BE CLOSED ty re- Prof. O. L. Chavarria-Aguilar of peace the English department will be featured on the University Televi- sion Center's "Understanding Our World" series in a program en- titled "Slang, Jargon, and All That Jazz" at 6:30 a.m. tomorrow on Channel 2. The program will view "sub- languages" of the past and pres- ent and trace patterns of their development. At the same time on Channel 4, the University's "Speak Up" series will present Prof. Rupert Cort- right of Wayne State University's speech department in a program or organizing and presenting pro- grams for community and pro- fessional organizations. With Prof. N. Edtd Miller of the speech department acting as host, three program chairmen from area organizations will discuss problems they have run across in their jobs and how they have dealt with them. FRIDAY SEPT. 20 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN at 5:00 II 1538 SAB Ff r t IF b TODAY Shows at S3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. SEMW DIAL 5-6290 "H IGHEST RATING!"i -N.Y. Doily News. The League Presents DANCE PARTI ES Thursday Evenings I The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for wich The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Per- sonnel Techniques Seminar No. 95-Dr. Thomas Q. Gilson, chairman, Dept. of Management. Rutgers Univ., "How to Use Action Training Techniques": Third Floor Conference Room, Mich. Union, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Cinema Guild-Jean Cocteau's "Testa- ment of Orpheus" and Basil Wright's ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN for announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered organizations only. Organizations who are planning to be active for the Fall Semester should reg- ister by Sept. 24, 1963. Formsavailable, 1011 Student Activities Bldg. Cercle Francais, Baratin-Coffee Hour & Folksinging, Sept. 19, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. Christian Science Organization, Testi- mony Meeting, Sept. 19, 7:30 p.m., 528D SAB. Congregational Disc. E & R Student Guild, Mid-week Worship, Sept. 19, 12:10-12:50 p.m., Douglas Memorial Chapel. Culture Club, General Meeting -- those interested in working with the Ann Arbor Tutorial Project, Sept. 19, 7:30 p.m, Union, Rm. 3D. Mich. Christian Fellowship, Sept. 20, 7:30 p.m., Union. Speaker: William L. Hoover, "Concepts of Culture." "Greek Sculpture": Arch. Aud., 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Applied Mathematics Seminar: Prof. George Minty will speak on "Monoton- icity Methods in Hilbert and Banach Spaces," Thurs,, Sept. 19, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 275 W. Engrg. Refreshments will be in Room 350 W. Engrg. at 3:30 p.m. General Notices Language Exam for Master's Degree in History: Sept. 20, 4-5 p.m., 2402 Mason Hall. Dictionaries may be used. Sign the. list posted in the History Office, 3601 Haven Hall. Student Government Council Approval of the following student-sponsored ac- tivities becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All pub- licity for these events must be withheld until the approval has become effective. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Reg- ular Meeting, Oct. 4, 7:30 p.m., Mich. Union. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Sept. 27, 7:30 p.m., Regular Meeting, Ann Ar- bor homes. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Sept. 20, Regular Meeting, Mich. Union. Uniform Examination for Mathematics 115: The exam will take place on Thurs., Sept. 19, from 7 to 8 p.m. in rooms to be announced by individual instructors. History Maxe-up Exams will be held Sat., Sept. 21, 9-12 a.m. in Room 2429 Mason Hall. Please consult your 'in- structor and then sign the list in the History Office, 3601 Haven Hall. Fall Semester Fees: At least 50 per cent is due and payable on or before Sept. 30, 1963. Non-payment of at least 50 per cent by Sept. 30 will result in the assess- ment of a delinquent penalty of $5.00. Mail payments postmarked after due date, Sept. 30, 1903, are late and sub- uecdato penalty. (Continued on Page 5) I II Sign up for the Whole Series Tonight RESERVE NOW FOR THE 1963-64 SEASON! 7 P.M. League MII RII GEEADIE mi WOL I11101 16 fiThdwWukabn spl boldkabve authe acrml SIX IN THE SIDE POCKET ! ------- ---- PANAVCSlDUi A M EHISXHTCLAUE "AO T" 3EI.5ASE THRU UNITED ARTIMTS NEXT: "HOOTENANNY HOOT" Billiard Room Michigan Union 10:30 A.M.-10:30 P.M. Daily Sorry girls-men only DIAL 8-64 16 PETER SELLERS momi M CINEMA GUILD &reeent4 I I EAVENSABOVE Thursday and Friday at 7 and 9 Jean CocteauIs Saturday and Sunday at 7 and 9 THE ANTI-WAR MASTERPIECE ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT- "Spreading satirical hilarity over the screen." A brilliant comedy. --.Y. News%1 TESTAMENT OF ORPHEUS ; Ak6 E . I I 1