TIE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, ,MARCH 13,1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY MARCH 12 1~Rft . y a. +vvaa . uv . *fvv., polo Teatro di Milano To Appear Six Days in Detroit I 7I ml the actors express themselves by pantomime, gestures, even acro- batics, as well as with music and rhythm. The company comes to the United States after a tour of 92 cities in 22 countries - ranging from Tokyo and Buenos Aires to Moscow and Edinburgh and In- cluding Africa and the Far East. The London Spectator's com- ment on their performance is ty- pical of critical reception. ". ..A glorious medley and com- pendium of everything the fantas- tic ingenuity of man has devised . acrobatics and juggling, sing- ing and dancing, pantomime and circus . . . Arouses constant won- der and joy." "The Servant of Two Masters" will be presented at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Matinees will be held on Saturday at 2:00 p.m. and Sunday at 3:00 p.m. * * * An exhibition of 22 oils and sev- eral drawings by Prof. Frede Vidar of the architecture college is cur- rently being held at Alumni Me- morial Hall. The paintings are Prof. Vidar's interpretation of Mount Athos, which he visited in 1958. "Athos is an anachronism," he explained. "It remains today as a survivor of an early Christian cul- ture and as a last living remnant of the great Byzantine Empire in Europe. "For the past thousand years, the peninsula has been a form of theocratic federation with all land and property belonging to its 20 great feudal monastic founda- tions. Life has been regulated to the protocol and traditions of the Byzantine. "Since the legendary visit of the Virgin Mary, women have been ex- cluded but miracles are still al- most daily occurrences, at least in the visions of the anchorites. Athos is a state of mind as much as it is a state of being, and be- cause of this, its identity may survive the cross-currents of pro- gress." The exhibition, sponsored joint- ly by the graduate school and the architecture college, will continue until April 6. The Wayne State University Theatre's production of "A Trip Abroad," a new translation of the famous French farce, "Le Voyage de Monsieur Perrichon" by Labiche and Martin, opens at 8:30 p.m. Friday. Additional performances will be held on Saturday and on March 24-26. Labiche, in collaboration with Edouard Martin, applied Moliere's farce technique to the customs and types of the middle classes. Un- like Moliere, his comic genius was officially recognized by his ad- mission to the Academie Francaise. He holds an established place in the repertoire of the Comedie Francalse, but is seldom seen on the English-speaking stage. Tickets are on sale at the Wayne University Ticket Office at Cass and Putnam. * * * The New York City Opera Com- pany will present their widely ac- claimed production of "The Ballad of Baby Doe," an American opera by Douglas Moore and John La- touche, at 8:20 p.m. Friday at De- troit's Masonic Temple. "The Ballad of Baby Doe" re- volves around the rise and fall of H. A. W. Tabor, a real-life Colora- do silver baron, who became the richest man in the territory, rocked the state with his divorce and subsequent marriage to the up- start Baby Doe, was impoverished in 1893 when Congress voted the country onto the gold standard, went bankrupt and died. It Is said that Baby Doe, faith- ful to the end, lived until 1935 in a shack on the outskirts of her husband's most lucrative mine. Offer Junior Girls Grants Any junior woman may now apply for one of the three avail- able Ethel A. McCormick Activ- ities Recognition Awards. Each of the $100.00 yearly stipends will be based mainly on participation in activities, but scholarship and financial need will also be con- sidered. Applicants for the awards may obtain petitions at the Under- graduate Office of the League and must return them there by Thurs- day. Interviews will be held Wednes- day, Thursday and Friday, April 6, 7 and 8. Report Tells' Public View Of Training (Continued from Page 1) considerations before a final deci- sion is made." In fact, when asked why more young people don't go to college, 72 per cent regard cost as the most important hindrance. Two-thirds also think that personal factors such as attitudes, ambition and industriousness are relevant. A quarter say some people want to make money quickly and stay out of college for this reason, while another quarter attributes non- attendance to early marriages or military service. Almost 40 per cent think that smaller colleges are cheaper than large universities, but only one in ten says the small schools are more expensive. Aware of Pressure An important section of the survey report notes that "people are conscious of the growing pres- sure on colleges in the state." Al- though not many are aware of the actual numbers of the surge which is soon to come, about 50 per cent realize there will be "a lot more" students in our colleges and uni- versities ten years from now. Only a fourth of the population is not aware of this crisis. In addition to higher taxes, a majority of the 950 people sampled favor building more colleges rather than enlarging present facilities to take care of this expansion. Expanding existing institutions is favored by only one fourth of the people. The remainder favor some combination of both pro- posals. How do people in Michigan evaluate colleges and universities as they are now? Most look for general academic quality. Men- tioned half as often as academic quality is competence in a special area like law or medicine or agri- culture. The survey finds "convenience, cost, type of support, morality, and rules are scarcely mentioned at all." Prefer Small Schools However: "When most people think of higher education, they think of general rather than ad- vanced academic training. When directly asked about size in refer- ence to where one might get a better education, small colleges were chosen over big institutions by a ratio of 4 to 3, with a third of the population saying there was no difference. "Small classes and the results of such smallness were the major ad- vantage reported for small institu- tions. The facilities, varied cur- riculum and faculties that are part of most large institutions were seen as the strength of such uni- versities from an evaluative point of view." But one third of the people in- terviewed were not even familiar with universities in Michigan - either they didn't know the names of any schools or didn't know that a university does anything besides campus teaching. No single activity besides cam- pus teaching stands out in people's minds. Of those who mention research, about half speak of medical re- search. Universities are seen as the source-alone or along with in- dustry and government--of most discoveries and research advances. The report notes, "As might be expected from the prominence given medical research in the pub- lic view, one-half of all adults in Michigan nominate medicine as an area of research deserving tax support. No other area is men- tioned by half as many." Only questions which highlight the survey were included in this preliminary report. Further analy- sis will be presented in a series of reports within the next few months. To Analyze Sub-Groups Analyzing sub - groups in the sample, these reports will cover questions such as: Do low income persons regard the cost of a col- lege education as prohibitive? What segments of the state popu- lation view colleges and faculties most favorably, and how likely is it that this kind of support can be activated and extended? The survey report warns "the data presented here do not neces- sarily define the path of adminis- trative policy." It points out that in some cases it may be good administrative policy to follow the public's view- point; in other cases the expert "may rightly feel that a given course of action is best within the values of public policy but this action may not be understood by the public." By RALPH KAPLAN "New professors and the NDEA Act caused the initiation of a Southern Asia Committee," Robert I. Crane of the history department said. The forming of this committee in early 1959 was the climax of three years work by the University to provide a comprehensive pro- gram for the study of India and its neighboring countries. Recruiting of faculty for the new program was begun in 1956 when the University decided it ought to have a program in South- ern Asia to supplement its Far Eastern and Near Eastern Studies programs. There were "too few professors at the time to do this," explained Prof. Crane. These included a member of the art department and another mem- ber of the political science depart- ment. Lists Professors Prof. Crane came from the Uni- versity of Chicago to teach Indian history. Other new professors in- cluded Prof. Richard Park, politi- cal science; Prof. L. A. Peter Gos- ling, geography; Prof. O. L. Cha- varria -Aguilar, Hindi; Visiting Prof. Siba Sen, also for Indian history; and Prof. Arthur Link, Buddhist and Hindi thought. The National Defense Education Act of 1958 was a great help to the program. It provided fellow- ship money for students interested in South Asian studies, and money for schools offering what were considered to be critical languages. One of the critical languages was Hindi, which enabled the University to receive enough gov- ernment aid to hire language training assistants. A combination of government Puerto Rican T1o Head Latin mericans Aida Rodriguez, Grad., from Puerto Rico, was recently elected president of the Latin American Club. Other officers are vice-president, Eduardo Fraute; secretaries, Jaime Mosquera and Ann Spencer; and treasurer, Eleanor Overll. Organization Notices Campus elections. Polls workers need- ed for campus elections March 15. 16. Sign up for a time and place. SGC headquarters, SAB. Call NO 3-0553 or come in after 3 p.m. Congregationa Disciples Z & R Stu- dent Guild, movie, discussion: "Bur- den of Truth," March 13, 7 p.m., 524 Thompson. Gamma Delta, Luth. Student Club, supper, discussion: "Individualism or Group Conformity," March 13, 6 p.m., 1511 washtenaw. India Students Assoc., Panel Discus- sion: "India's Foreign Policy," March 13, 3 p.m., Union, Conf. Rm. Partici- pants: Profs. Crane, Park, Sen. La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, March 14, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. Cafe y conversaclon. Lutheran Student Assoc., meeting, March 13, 7 p.m., Hill St. and S. Forest Ave. Speaker: Dr. R. E. Van Deusen, Washington, D. C., "The 1960's: Decade of Destiny" * 4 * Young Republican Club, March 15, 8 p.m., Union, 3-0. Speaker: Paul D. Bagwell. Student Activities Bldg. Admin. Bd., Desk space available on second floor of SAB. Organizations interested in space ,contact Sutart Dow, Rm. 2535, SAB by mail by March 18. * * * Political Issues Club, "Another Tui- tion Increase?" with Vice-President Pierpont, March 15, 8 p.m., Union, Rms. R and s. Mich. Christian Fellowship, March 13, 4 p.m., Lane Ball. Speaker: H. Stone, "Christ Concealed in the Old Testament." TO STUDY INDIA, NEIGHBORS: University Starts Southern Asia Studies (Editor's Note: This is the last in a series of five articles on for- eign studies programs at the Uni- v'ersity. Previous articles have dealt with Far Eastern, Russian and Near Eastern Studies.) ( and University funds in late 1959 gave "substantial funds" for the library, Prof. Crane continued. The improved library has "un- officially" been selected as one of the six libraries in the nation that will get books on Southern Asia under Public Law 480. "Quite good," was Prof. Crane's description of the enrollment in the program. The increased num- ber of courses and rising interest has raised the number of students in the program from a handful to "about 30." Evidence of greater interest is reflected in the record of fellow- ship applications. In 1959 there were eight completed applications for four fellowship positions. For the five 1960 fellowships avail- able, there have been sixteen com- pleted applications. Applications Rise Prof. Crane explained that the increase in applications came "without a large amount of pub- licity," in contrast with some schools that put out "thirty or forty page brochures," he con- tinued. Rising student interest has caused University interest in ex- panding both the curriculum and faculty of the program. Three courses which the Committee on Southern Asia Studies has recom- mended are: 1) Anthropology of Southern Asia. Prof. Crane stated that lack of this course is "a major gap in the program." 2) Bahasa Indonesia - a langu- age spoken in Indonesia and Mal- ava and probably the second most important Southeast Asian langu- age. 3) Development Economics of Southern Asia. The Committee on Southern Asian Studies will "probably" be- come a Center on Southern Asian Studies. This will give the pro- gram "additional effectiveness," commented Professor Crane, and the Center "will be more or less operated on the lines of the Center for Japanese Studies," he contin- ued. A Center can do more than a committee to "get money and co- ordinate graduate training pro- grams," explained Prof. Crane. A student cannot normally either major in or receive a degree in Southern Asian' studies. The courses dealing with Southern Asia are offered by the art, history, geography and political science departments. r -' HAVE TO STUDY? Grab a quick bite at HILLEL SUPPER CLUB Today, 6-7 P.M. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill St. Held Over 3rd Big Week ACADEMY AWARD Nominees .ts= DIAL NO 5-6290 ldppp ----Lv---NP ELIZABETH TAYLOR KATHARINE HEPBURN "Best Actress" EUZABETU MOITCOUERY MOVATIIE TAYLOR CLIFT HEPBURN Also Nominated for BEST ART DIRECTION ACADEMY AWARD 97b~ 6mm S.G.C. Cinemlaqul Tonight at 7:00 and 9:00 ELIA KAZAN'S "ON THE WATERFRONT" with Marlon Brando, Lee J. Cobb, Eva Marie Saint, Rod Steiger, Karl Malden ACADEMY AWARD ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents Bob VoIlen cordially invites you to VOTE FOR BOB VOLLEN L.S.&A. PRESI DENT March 15 &' 16 DIAL NO 2-6264 NOW! ... _ I I IF YOU NEVER SEE ANOTHER MOTION PICTURE IN YOUR LIFE YOU MUST SEE Story ,, .t4E Of Our FREDSTA~hm nPE-IN 3 TUESDAY at 8 at HILLEL RABBI IRWIN GRONER Asst. Rabbi, Congregation Shaarey Zedek, Detroit II I I