n. Inn 1 . THE MICHIGAN UAILY WEDNESDAY. (7t ;"' 'f RPR qua TH IHG1iD IYWflFfArlCfIV~~ j U, lydS udiciary To Decide Discipline By ALISON SMALLEY. "Petitioning is open for the new- ly formed University Committee on Standards and Conduct," Har- ry Youtt, '64, Joint Judiciary Council chairman, said yesterday. The committee, composed of three faculty members and two students, replaces the University Senate Subcommittee on Disci- pline, which was manned solely, by three faculty members. _ j SchosPlan Pollutio-n Lab Construction By LEONARD PRATT Prof. David C. Chandler of the zoology department yesterday re- ported "important 'progress~ in plans to obtain a water pollution laboratory for the University. Prof. Chandler is chairman of an advisory committee for the Midwest Water' Pollution Research Facility. The committee, has been formed within the Committee on Institutional Cooperation, a joint committee of universities includ- ing the Big Ten universities and the University of Chicago. At a meeting Monday, the mem- bers of the advisory committee unanimously expressed the "of fi- cial interest" of their schools in cooperating with a pollution' lab- oratory to be constructed on North Campus. The laboratory would be financed' by the, United. States Public Health Service. Under the Public Health Serv- ice, the laboratory "will serve a 13 state area. Prof. Chandler indicat- ed that the facility would serve the University since, it would pro- vide equipment for graduate study and faculty research. The North Campus building, now being planned by University staff 'members,/ is tentatively scheduled for completion in Sep- tember, 1965. Prof., Chandler said that he expects the program to be in full operation by that time. The staff of the laboratory will cooperate in research and train- ing. Outside the jurisdiction of the Public Health Service, the mem- bers of the. advisory committee fully approved the creation of a CIC -backed program of. seminars and public affairs programs on the subject of water pollution. Prof. Chandler said that he expects the seminar program to be in opera- tion within six months. "Previously, Joint Judiciary Council heard a student's case and made its decision. The subcom- mittee acted as a faculty hearing board. It received transcripts of the case containing the facts con- cerning the student. Faculty Decision "The faculty members carefully reviewed how the JJC made its decision. It was then up to the subcommittee to confirm this deci- sion," said Prof. B. James George, Jr., former chairman of the sub- committee. The new Standards and Con- duct Committee, established in July, serves as a final appeals board for all penalties invoked by judicial bodies within its jurisdic- tion. "If a student living in a dormi- tory is dissatisfied with the deci- sion of the . dormitory judiciary board, he may appeal his case to JJC. From there, his case may go to the Appeals Committee on Standards and Conduct," Youtt pointE caout. Accepts All Cases However, while the former board made it necessary for a student to have his case reviewed at all A cross Campus University President and Mrs. Harlan Hatcher will give a tea from 4 to 6 p.m. today at their home. The Friars will be present to perform. The tea is sponsored jointly by the Michigan Union and the Michigan League. acteria... Prof. Rollin D. Hotchkiss of the Rockefeller Institute will talk on "Listening in on Inter-Bacterial Information" at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Amph.. Cello Concert ... Prof. Jerome Jelinek of the mu- sic school} and Rhea Kish, pianist, will be heard in a cello concert at 8:30 p.m. today in Rackham Lec- ture Hall. Works by Chopin and Bach will be included in the pro- gram. Von Kleist... Prof. Clarence Pott, chairman of the German department, will give a talk on the "World of Hein- rich von Kleist," at 8 p.m. today in the East Conference Rm. of the Rackham Bldg. The talk will be in English. JAMES A. LEWIS ... approves decisions these levels, the present committee will accept cases from any of them. "Many times JJC will waive a case, or refuse to review it. The appeal will then be directed im- mediately to the new committee," Youtt explained. The committee can vote to sus- pend a student, while JJC can only recommend that a student be suspended. All decisions are final after being approved by Vice-Pres- ident for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. The committee also aids in training new members of the judi- cial structure, and advises Lewis on changes, in rules and regula- tions. "As of now, it is a paper committee. with a new constitu- tion t-) draw up. and new members to enlist. In the future, we expect it to handie between five and ten appeals cases," Youtt said. Petitions for students wishing to serve on the committee are avail- able at the Office of Student Af- fairs in the SAB. Each candidate will be interviewed by JJC's exec- utive board, which will present its slate of student candidates to Uni- versity Presicer t Harlan Hatcher for his o2pproval. Monk Lists Three Bases Of Decision By MILLICENT NOBLEj Franz Steindl-Rast, who as a monk of Mt. Savior is known as Brother David, said yesterday that there are three basic exper- iences which seem necessary be- fore a man makes the decision to become a monk. He spoke at a lecture sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs. First, a man must face death before he can think of being a monk, Brother David said. He must see life outlined against a background of death; he must realize that "man's finite existence is 'open' towards the infinite, and does not make sense without refer- ence to that which transcends man," he said. Saying that these ideas refer to monks "of all times and cultures," he added that monks make the choice between hope and despair in the face of death, accept the challenge to live which is pre- eminent in the idea of death, and become "radical men of hope" in their anticipation of it. The monk "tries to live every hour as if it were his last," Brother David said. 'The "encounter with Christ" which is "the decisive element of monasticism" was the second ex- perience which Brother David dis- cussed. It entails the development of faith which is defined as a per- sonal encounter with the God- man, "the living Christ." The third basic experience, ac- cording to Brother David, is the encounter with monastic life as one radical form of Christian life. The monk's primary task is the confrontation of death, and to this end he removes himself from other men by his adherence to the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedi- ence. The Benedictine monks work "to restore man's wholeness in holi- ness," a goal which they find "love's ultimate answer to the ul- timate question of death," Broth- er David said.' ITALIAN BUREAUCRACY: Stirling Sees Difficulties Concerning Corruption V. P. Lewis Dean Robertson Dean Spurr By ALICE FIALKIN "It is very hard to find out about corruption, and even when you do, you can't possibly publish it because it is libelous," Prof. Paul Strling of the London School of Economics said yesterday in a lecture on "Impartial Rules and Personal Morality." Prof. Stirling talked generally about a type of bureaucracy and more specifically about the gov- ernment of Italy. There are two conflicting sets of morality, Prof. Stirling explain- ed, one that stresses personal re- lations such as friends, neighbors and relatives, and another that emphasizes efficiency and impar- tiality. The former he called "personal morality" and the lat- ter "impartial rules." 'Closed Society' The society of southern Italy, he continued, is a "closed" one of tightly knit, small towns ranging in size up to 3000 people. 85 per cent of the towns are agricultural. "The landed class is in control of these towns, regulating its politics and affairs. The lower levels of society are not given an education," said Prof. Stirling. He said that very often the doc- tors, lawyers and priests, the pow- erful elite, are members of one family. They are subject to all the pressures of a small town com- munity where everyone is well known. "If a personal society exists, it continues to exist under a bureau- cracy and is subject to the wishes of outside influences. This we call corruption," said Prof. Stirling. "Once it's in it stays in," he added. Corruption There are three types of corrup- tion; favoritism or the use of pow- er in someone's behalf; bribery or the "dishing out of benefits, usually cash" and beculation or the "dishing out of benefits to oneself," Prof. Stirling said. The Italian bureaucracy is ubi- quitous, Prof. Stirling said, and the bureaucrats accede to re- quests without much hesitation. To refuse to do a favor is con- sidered a hostile and unwise act. It is also held to be an indication of having weak friends. Inefficiency "As a result, many capable peo- ple do not even try to secure of- fices while undeserving men often are awarded them. This leads to inefficiency and inadequacy." Since 1950 there has been rapid change in four areas of the gov- ernment: vast amounts of state resources have been channeled in- to society, stimulating the econ- omy and providing more jobs; a great number of official institu- tions have been created such as socialized medicine and unemploy- ment payments; there has been an increase in transportation and TRAVEL COURSES complete curriculums Tour Escort & Travel Sales Representative $5.95 Travel Agent $6.95 Travel Agency Management $5.95 TRAVEL CAREERS 708-MD Lucerne Avenue Lake Worth, Palm Beach County, Florida communication services accom- panied by an improvenment in roads, buses, and trains and suf- frage has been reintroduced based on three political parties with the lower classes voting for the first time. "Despite these manmy changes, there is still a corrupt bureaucracy in control of the country. It is in no way due to the people's being personally dishonest but to a gov- ernmental system incapable of changing," Prof. Stirling said. SCRUTINIZE TRIMESTER 8:00 P.M. Room R & S of the Union Sponsored by Special Projects of the Michigan Union FRIDAY I Special to U. of M. S Eat" Buffet for only upon presenta Fr NIGHT BUFFET 5-9 P.M. tudents ... our "All You Can '$1.75 on November 1, 1963 tion of your Student ID. Pat Elkins Gretchen Groth Ron Wilton *.:' . .. t''., i.'*t" * a..,i 4 , v i rightfully inexpensive gourmet's de- I " Sunday Brunch 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. " Ideal for Sorority & Fraternity Parties " Reservations Now for Christmas Parties " Guest Rooms from $6.00 " Dinner Nightly 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. " Banquet Rooms for 125 Persons light . . . five salads, fresh shrimp, three hot meats, two hot fish dishes, cold meats, rel ishes, fresh fruit, home-made rolls, beverage . . all for only $2.25. I HURON HOTEL 124 Pearl St., Ypsilanti Phone HU 3-1771 I F', I College Roundup U A STUDENTS & FACULTY for a Horrifying Halloween :i cal for information U DIAL 8-6416 TODAY ONLY FAMOUS CLASSICS SERIES Collegiate Press Service NEW HAVEN-The use of hal- lucination - producing d r u g s has spread to Yale University, caus- ing many undergraduates to seek' psychiatric treatment, according to the'Yale Daily News. Several students have suffered borderline psychoses from the drugs mescaline and psilocybin. At Harvard University 1 a s t spring, Prof. Richard Alpert was dismissed for administering mes- caline and psilocybin to under-_ graduates. The use of mescaline, however, had not previously been reported at Yale. At Yale, the hallucinogens were not given by a faculty member or by anyone connected with the ad- ministration. The students who purchased the drugs in Mexico, took them on their own initiative1 in an informal experiment.1 It is not known what action thet university will take.c * * * SARASOTA-When New College opens its doors to students in 1964, with about 120 students of a planned enrollment of 1200, "an exciting new experiment in the field of higher education" will have been started, according to John W. Gustad, dean of the new institution. The school expects to have a library of more than 300,000 vol- umes at the very outset. Dean Gustad explained that this initial library expenditure of $3 million is indicative of New Col- lege's desire to establish itself as a top undergraduate school. New ORGANIZATION NOTICES German Club, Coffee Hour, German Conversation, Music, Singing, Oct. 30, 3-5 p.m., 4072 FB. Refreshments. "Herz- lich Willkommen!" * 4*a Le Cercle Francais, Coffee Hour, 3-5 p.m., Oct.,31, 3050 FB. La Sociedad Hispanica: "Un Viaje por las Provincias de Mexico," Oct. 30, 8 p.m., 3050 FB. University Lutheran Chapel, Refor- mation Day Eve vespers conducted by vicar John Koenig, Holy Communion, Oct. 30, 10 p.m., 1511 Washtenaw. College grew out, of a discussion among representatives of the Ford Foundation, Carnegie Corpora- tion and the Congregational Church. New College is being planned in part after its namesake, New College of Oxford University. The college will be divided into houses. Each of these houses, like Har- vard and Yale, will be equipped with their own libraries and will have tutors living among the stu- dents. The tutorial system, also used at Oxford, Yale and Harvard, provides for a great deal of inde- pendent study by the student un- der the guidance of a tutor. A New College student will pro- gress at his own speed and con- sequently there will be no grade levels. In addition there will be no marks at New College, nor will there be a credit system for courses. A student will work at a specific subject until he reaches "proficiency" in that field, at which time the student may move on to more advanced study. THE ROARING TWENTIES IN 1963 '63 SKIDOO EL .4K Friday night let's all 7:30 PARADE from Union (band, cheerleaders) 8:00 PEP RALLY, Ferry Field (Bump, Joe O'Donnell, Dean Bingley, Dr. Losh) ;2 it 8:30 YELL LIKE HELL CONTEST (including bonfire)" 9:00 FIREWORKS DISPLAY (Ferry Field) 9:30 SNAKE DANCE (winding around the campus) JOIN THE FUN ON FRIDAY NIGHT! V. 0 M-G-M's* Finest Screen Triumph! 'na r1 , ^1 With a star cast af,65 players featuring. W.C.Fields " MaureenO'Sullivd Madge Evans. Edna May Olive Frank Lawton " Elizabeth Rlla Lionel Bartymore Freddie Bartholomew Lewis Stone " Roland ,You Dtivatedby GEORGE CUKOR. whose previous film success was "Utatlr Womsin. " Produced by David b. Selzmak 411 I fl I BUBBLING - SATIRE STARTING'THURSDAY "EVE WANTS TO SLEEP" CHARMINGLY FLI PPANT I DIAL 2-6264 114tt I I t IU \' tWl\ ENDS FRIDAY ' Shows Start at 1:00-2:50-4:50 7:00 and 9:05 """'JULIE CLAIRE RICHARD RUSS IRIS- N B AMISON IN PANAVISION' TOMORROW-8 P.M. ODETTA #,# ,, I I --- -- - mmmmi I A Masterpiece in Music and Color SWAM. I .* _. ;.- t;1,