THE MICHIGAN DAILY CANIC ERUPTIONS: (elley, Dingle Question Drought Theory College Roundup . wmftm . . A TODAY By STEVEN HALLER lthough it is an interesting athesis that a definite connec- exists between a recent series olcanic eruptions on the is- of Bali and the severe ights that the United States been experiencing, the idea is what within the realm of con- ire so far," Prof. William C. Y of the geology department d recently. recent theory connecting the phenomena had been set 1 by Prof. Aden B. Meinel (4 University of Arizona in Tuc- who suggested that if one ralian worker's idea - that or showers can cause heavy fall in otherwise arid regions w the equator-is true, then e rains could conceivably have balanced by droughts north he equator. of. Meinel explained that vol- c dust, disseminated at high udes, provides nuclei for the ation of ice crystals, which descend to form raindrops. cording to Prof. Meinel's ry, the dust that was respon- for the southern rains has spread to northern latitudes. will be interesting to see if oming winter is unusually wet fe north," Prof. Meinel noted. ,of. Kelly commented that the geologic standpoint, it is atter of record that major mic eruptions have led to rap- id but temporary dispersion of dust over vast regions. Whether these particular Balinese erup- tions have been responsible for the droughts in this country "is a problem which finds no solution in previous geologic studies," he added. - Prof. Kelly went on to say that the question would seem to be es- sentially a meteorological one. "Prof. Meinel's idea appears to provide a sound mechanism for localized rainfall, but I have no idea of the degree to which sim- ilar eruptive activity has been ac- companied by correlative periods of drought." Past Action "Along this line, geologists have concerned themselves mainly with the interrelationship of past vol- canic activity and major climatic change on a level that might effect glaciation. There is no striking parallelism between times of past volcanic activity and past periods of glaciation," he com- mented. Prof. A. Nelson Dingle of the meteorology department expressed strong skepticism that any mater- ial change could be effected in the climate of the Northern Hemis- phere directly because of volcanic eruptions in the Southern Hem- isphere. He explained that the circula- tion of air currents in the re- spective hemispheres was divided by a tropical belt of currents, thus hampering the flow of air from one hemisphere to the other. Prof. Dingle added that it is difficult to know how the distri- bution of precipitation is spaced, especially over oceans. He suggested that alternation between areas of heavy precipita- tion and areas of slight precepita- tion occurs from one longitude to another. "Such alternation could also be true of temperature varia- tion, explaining why last year's winter was unusually cold in Mich- igan and yet unseasonably warm in Newfoundland," he commented. By STEVEN ZARIT FARMVILLE, Va. - The Ro- tunda, newspaper of Longwood College, a state teacher's college for white women, was advised by school officials to modify its stand in demanding integration of Farmville's only motion picture theatre. Editor Donna Mae Humphlett responded to the pressure by leaving the editorial page blank except for a brief explanation in the center of the page. Public schools in Prince Edward County have been closed since 1959 to pre- vent desegregation. * * * CAMBRIDGE-Despite an in- creased program. of financial aid to Negro students, Dean of Admis- sions and Fincancial Aid at Har- vard University Fred L. Glimp an- nounced that no significant in- crease in Negro applicants has re- sulted. He was confident, how- ever, that the program would in- duce a steady rise of Negro appli- cants during the next few years. Harvard's aid program is part of an Ivy League-wide "Talent Searching Program" which is de- signed to attract qualified, but economically deprived students to the schools through a program of personal contact and financial assistance. CAMBRIDGE-Mrs. Barbara M. Solomon, dean of East House of Radcliffe College, announced the possibility of all-night study dates in the new school library now under construction. She stated that although the library itself would not remain open all night, a room might be set aside for night-long studying by Radcliffe girls and their dates. PHILADELPHIA - The refusal by the administration of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania to grant a campus auditorium as site for a proposed speech by Alabama's Gov. George Wallace brought out 200 pickets to protest the deci- sion. Plans for the speech were originally formulated by the Law School Forum, but were dropped and thesvisit by the governor labelled as too risky. At that point the college news- paper, the Daily Pennsylvanian. undertook sponsorship of the pro- posed speech, working our secur- ity arrangements with local po- lice and presenting their request for an auditorium to the adminis- tration. HAMILTON, N.Y.-More than 1000 persons watched firemen fight a blaze early Sunday morn- ing in the 90-year-old adminis- tration building of Colgate Uni- versity. A university spokesman said that it might take years to replace the university's records which had been destroyed in the fire. It is estimated that the fire caused $1 million damage. Plan To Keep LSA Seminar Despite a small turnout at its first student counseling seminar last week, "there was enough re- sponse to lead the literary college steering committee to continue the project," David Passman, '64, said yesterday. An expanded program of coun- seling will be offered next semes- ter shortly after \the tentative time schedules are printed. Pass- man attributed this year's low at- tendance-less than a dozen stu- dents showed up-largely to the fact that many students had al- ready registered before the coun- seling was offered. "Those who came were pleased," Passman commented. The program was designed to aid students in choosing courses. "WHY A MAN BECOMES A MONK" Brother David Steidlrast-born and studied in Vienna, Austria, receiving a Doctorate in Psychology. Cur- rently, as a Benedictine monk., Brother David is study- ing and residing at Mount Saviour Monastery, Pine City, New York. 4:10 p.m., October 29, Auditorium ', Angell Hall Sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs through the courtesy of the Giuld House OPEN TO THE PUBLIC t II 11 KAUFMAN IMPRESSIONS OF PROVINCETOWN ..orivt4e ~atLlery WEEKDAYS 10-4 SATURDAYS 10-1 201 NICKELS ARCADE I. Wednesday, Oct. 30 at 8 P.M. Lecture on the World of Abraham Joshua Heschef by RABBI FRITZ ROTHSCHILD Instructor in Philosophy, Jewish Theological Seminary of America I and Author, "BetweendGod and Man" The standard interpretation of Heschel Sponsored by Beth Midrash, with cooperation of- B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St. VOLCANIC ERUPTION-The eruption of Kilauea volcano on the island of Hawaii has sent orange-crimson lava shooting into the air since earlier this week. "It's a real eruption," said Gordon MacDonald of the University of Hawaii. "We don't know what to expect." I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .t S ASSWVA"WS . . 1i 16' i ;-Mm- LAFFS (Latest Attempts at Friday Follies) S :} },',~y+.{ 'i3 r.'Sri":ii~~~~~...... ....'.....'....~...:~~iJ a'V.. + . Bed rolling contest: from Rackham Bldg. to General Library . Scramble for silver: coeds cavort in hay stack 3. Tricycle rally:for male' contestants over 6 ft. tall 1. The roadrunners: for music 4:15 FRIDAY-DIAG official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be The Daily Official Bulletin is an written 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. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29 Day Calendar. Landscape Design Study Course 2, Se- ries II-Rackham Bldg., Registration, 8:30 a.m. Fall Blood Bank Clinic-Univ. Blood Bank Association: Third Floor, Mich. Union, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Dept. of Classical Studies Lecture- Bernard Ashmole, Oxford Univ., Charles Eliot Norton Lecturer of the American Institute of Archaeology, "Greek Votive Reliefs": Aud. B, Angell Hall, 4 p.m. School of Music Recital - Millard Cates, tenor; Eugene Bossart, piano; and Philip Duey, narrator: Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:30 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Henry ten Hoor, English Language & Literature; thesis: "A Re-Examination of Susanna Centlivre as a Comic Dramatist," to- day, 2601 Haven Hall, at 2 p.m. Chair- man, Paul Mueschke. General Notices Vuicans Honorary Scholarship Appli- cations are available at the Scholarship Office, 2011 Student Activities Bldg. This $200 scholarship is open to ap- plication by all undergrad engineering students who have a recor4 of 2.5 or above. The award will be made on the bases of academic record, need, and campus activities. Applications must be returned by Mon., Nov. 11. Admission Test for Grad Study in Business: Candidates taking the Ad- mission Test for Grad Study in Busi- ness on Nov. 2 are requested to report to Room 130 Business Admin. Bldg. at 8:45 Sat, morning. Student Tea will be held at the home of President and Mrs. Hatcher from 4 to 6 pam., Wed., Oct. 30. Flu Shots: There will be a "flu shot" clinic at the Health Service, Wed., Oct. 30 from 8-11:30 a.m. and 1-4:30 p/m/ The charge is $1.00 for student and $1.50 for faculty, staff and spouses. This will be the second or "booster" shot for those who were innoculated at the first two clinics. However, those who missed previous clinics may obtain the first shot at this time. Fori~egn Yi sitors Following are the foreign visitors pro- grammed through the International Center who will be on campus this week on the dates indicated. Program ar- rangements are being made by Mrs. Clifford R. Miller, Ext. 3358, Interna- tional Center. Miss Maria R. Uendes Leal, Ass't Prof. of Educational Psychology, Univ. of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal, Oct. 23-31. Albert B. Cherns, Secretary, Commit- tee on Social Studies; Head, Human Sciences Section, Dept. of Scientific ORGAN IZATION NOTICES Alpha Phi Omega, Pledge Hospital Party, Oct. 28, 7 p.m., University Hos- pital. * * * German Club, Coffee Hour-German Conversation, Music, Singing, Oct. 30, 3-5 p.m., 4072 FB. Refreshments. "Herz- lich Willkommen!" * * * SGC Human Relations Board, Oct. 29, 6:45 p.m., Markley Lounge 2. Speakers: Harris (Law School) & Mayhew (Soc. Dept.), "Is Special Compensation for Negroes Justified?" * * * Russian Club, Films: "Russian Life Today" (Color), "Peoples of the Soviet Union" (English), Oct. 29, 8 p.m.,.2050 FB. II Ciciolo Italiano, Coffee Hour-Oct. 29, 3-4 p.m., 3050 FB. ' * * Le Cercle Francaic-Halloween Party- Oct. 28, 8 p.m., 3050 FB. * * * International Students Assn.-Culture Committee, Oct. 29, 4 p.m. Speaker: Dr. Brumfield (History), "India: A Cul- ture in Search of Self Assurance." Mul- ti-purpose Room of the UGLI. La Sociedad Hispanica, Reunion-Un Viaje por las Provincias de Mexico, Oct. 30, 8 p.m., 3050 FE. U of M Friends of SNCC, Oct. 29, 8 p.m. in Room 36 of the Union, Main Topic: The Americus Demonstration in Detroit on Nov. 7. and Industrial Research, British Govt., London, England, Oct. 31-Nov. 1. Dr. Joseph Azar, Prof. of School of Public Health and School of Medicine, American Univ., Beirut, Lebanon and Member of Supreme Council of Health in Lebanon, President of Lebanese Pub- lic Health Assoc., Lebanon, Nov. 4-5. Placement TEACHER PLACEMENT: The following school has recorded a vacancy for this semester. Lawrenceville, Va.-Brunswick County Public Schools-History/Head basketball coach. For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, 663-1511, Ext. 3547. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad students, please call Ext. 3544 for appts. with the. following: THURS., OCT. 31-. Office, of the Secretary of Defense- Men & women, Dec., May & Aug. grads. U.S. citizenship. Seeking Liberal Arts with Econ., Poll. Set., & Law for posi- tions in Econ., Mgmt. Trng., Personnel, Public Admin., Stat., & Transp. FRI., NOV. 1- International Paper Co., Throughout U.S.-Men-Dec., May & Aug. grads. U.S. citizenship. (p.m. only). Seeking majors in Econ., Poli. Set., English, Soc., Psych., Fine Arts (design), Philo., Journ., Speech & General Liberal Arts. Positions: Sales Trng. Prog. w/assign- ment to any one of 14 sales divisions throughout U.S. * * * Please make appointments by 4 p.m. of the day before you wish to interview. WOLVERINE CLUB PRESENTS Student Air Charters to NEW YORK on*UNITED AIR LINES "THANKSGIVING VACATION" Leave Nov. 27. . ............................ Return Dec. 1 "CHRISTMAS VACATION" FIt. No. 1-Leave Dec. 20 ... ...............Return Jan. 12 Flt. No. 2-Leave Dec. 21 ................Return Jan. 12 ROUND TRIP, $ 51.50 Includes Special Buses Between Union & Willow Run and All Toxes UNITED AIRLINES IS THE NATION'S LARGEST REGULARLY SCHEDULED AIRLINE WITH AN OUTSTANDING RECORD OF DEPENDABLE PERFORMANCE. THESE DEPARTURES ARE GUARANTEED, WEATHER PERMITTING. BOOK NOW, AND BE SURE YOU'LL BE HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS! Call Wolverine Club NO 3-9731 r 0i ., - v . .I . .. .. . T T I 1 2' i. O~ BE INTELLIGENT ABOUT IT! My price is $43 complete, why pay MORE for LESS service ? 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