THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATTIROAY: APR Ir. 2R._ THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~ATTT1~.flAV APRTV 09 - J as.,.a a., La. *I.Sfl ~VU~ .euv PtxJ.URLLM , t1r mIlu zs, lybv New Pathology Building Sees Full Use Dean Terms Science Aid 'Educational' Government-supported research toward military objectives has great educational value for the entire world, Dean Stephen S., Attwood of the engineering college said at a lecture for Air Force officers recently. As head of the engineering col- lege, which is the center of the largest university research pro- gram in the United States, Att- wood said that while research sup- ported by federal funds is often classified, it has important educa- tional applications in two specific areas. First of all, "students seeking advanced degrees can be assigned to 'portions of the work that can be declassified, that have no ob- vious military significance, and can use their efforts in advancing their educational activities.." Notes Advantages Attwood also pointed out the obvious advantages of the results of such research. "It must be recognized and thoroughly under- stood that the governmental and military money supporting our re- search has led to the development of the new theories, new materials, new circuits, new equipment and generally new scientific and en- gineering information." He declared that these new de- velopments, which would have taken decades under the older, slower rates of progress, are in- creasing in rapidity and scope. "Is not this rapid increase in our rate of acquisition of knowl- edge valuable to all humanity through communication, and thus contributing toward welfare and peace?" Rising Number We must also remember the rising number of young men, trained and contributing to fur- ther development and utilization of our physical resources. He explained the growth of the University into the largest re- search center of any school in the country as "resulting from the pressures of World War II and the succeeding decade and a half." AT YR MEETING: Goodman, Lamb List GOP Stands for '60 By MAME JACKSON William Goodman and Karl Lamb of the political science de- partment recently defined the Re- publican position on 1960's major political issues. They spoke at a meeting of he Young Republicans. "Although no fundamental pol-, icy changes have been made dur- ing the Eisenhower administra- tion, organized interest groups have continued their activity," Lamb said. "Both parties will be paying at- tention to the renewed demands of these groups." Lamb predicted that the major interest groups, which are con- cerned with such controversial topics as civil rights, farm legisla- tion, medical care for the aged and labor issues, will dominate the coming election. Outlines Rights Stand Endorsing a strong ,Republican stand on civil rights, Lamb said, "The factors of principle and practicality fit together very neatly, for the Republicans this year. "Since the Republicans° elimi- nated the slavery status of Negroes in the nineteenth century, it has been the historic mission of the party to insure their rights as citizens." He also emphasized the fact that "the United States cannot con- vtuce underdeveloped countries peopled by non-white races that they should follow the democratic way." Explains Farm Policy The Republican position on farm Goodman said, "Republicans tend to be more concerned with and solicitous of employers. They are more con- cerned with employees in their re- lations with union leaders than are the Democrats," he. main- tained. Health insurance for people over 65 years old is another "big" issue this year. The Republican bill, comparable to the Democratic Forand Bill in Congress, features a graduated paying scale and al- lows voluntary participation in the plan for people irrespective of whether or not they come under social security, the speakers said. -Daily-Ian MacNiven MEDICAL CENTER ADDITION-Occupied fully for the first time after the first of the year, the new Pathology Building of the University Medical Center contains considerable laboratory facilities and some classrooms. The building is connected to the University Hospital by an elevated bridge; showing in back of the Pathology Building is the Medical Science Building. 'U' DEPARTMENT PAR TICIPA TES: Biochemical Research Assumes Increasing Importance- Dorm Food Distributed By Service By SYLVIE BERLINER The Food Service, on Huron Street, is the center for food dis- tribution to the residence halls, Women's League, and University Hospital from packagers all over the country. Bread, rolls, and ice cream are the only things made in the Food Service Building. Everything else is cooked in individual residence halls, which requisition what they need every day. Most of the building's space is taken up by refrigerators. Meats are kept hanging in four huge freezers at a few degrees above zero. Produce is also stored at low temperatures, and received daily from Detroit to isure freshness. Frozen goods, whih Herbert P. Wagner, the building's director, says are fast taking a lead over canned foods, are stored at near zero temperatures also. Even staples, such as cereals and flour, are kept under refrigeration of 50-60* to prevent spoilage. Building Mechanized The building. is completely mechanized. Goods are transport- ed within the building on mach- ine driven carts. Flour is taken in sacks, directly from trucks, through a ,chute to a room where it is stored- All canned goods are stacked on wooden platforms which can be lifted up by forked tongues at- tached to the carts. Carrots come in 50 lb. sacks, lettuce in cartons, pickles in jars, but vinegar still comes in wooden barrels whichmust have water in their recessed tops to keep the Wood swelled, preventing leaks. Stock Dog Food One of the most startling sights was stacks of dog and rabbit food. Wagner said that a new function of the Food Service was to supply food for all research animals, and it has become a big job. During the 1958-59 fiscal year, 4,381 tons of merchandise were r#- ceived and distributed, including 64,000 lbs. of coffee, and 250,300 lbs. of sugar. ThirtY-four thous- and gallons of ice cream were produced, as well as 1,458,000 rolls and 280,100 loaves of bread. The University receives almost no government surplus; what they~ do get is only for the children's section of the hospital. Every- thing alse is purchased, at a cost of over $2 million. WUOM Sets WUOM will present "Orestes" by Euripides at 1:30 p.m. tomor- row. Based on a translation by Prof. William Arrowsmith of the Uni- versity ofi Texas, it will be the first radio production of the Greek tragedy in that translation. It will also be the first time WUOM has produced a drama of such length and type using local personnel and its own facilities. v Ay SUSAN HERSHBERG N7 Since the 1840s, biochemistry has become increasingly important on the scene of medical research. It was then that "the chemical approach to the interpretation of life first began to take hold," Prof. Halvor N. Christensen, chairman of the biological chemistry de- partment said recently. Since first Victor Vaughan and Prof. H. B. Lewis pioneered the University biochemistry depart- ment, it has strived to work with and serve the entire University. Senior undergraduate instruction is available not only in medical school but in the literary college, dentistry, nursing, pharmacy, and graduate schools. The department furnishes op- portunitiesrfor instruction, re- search and teaching by means of research. The basic mysteries of the life processes are still un- known, and students can only learn about these processes through experimentation and ex- ploration. Biochemistry Explained ."Biochemistry" is a new word invented when organic chemistry began to reveal its many ramifi- cations. Basically, the study of biochemistry is the "exploration and description of life processes in molecular terms," as defined by Prof. Christensen. The biochemist is either "a chemist who has made a life- time preoccupation of biology, or a biologist who equips himself for the chemical exploration of life phenomena." Prof. Christensen emphasized caution in what he called "this analytical episode in the history of biological research." He empha- sized: "We Just have to know how the parts work before we can con- ceive of how the whole works. Our long-range objective is integra- tive, but it would be futile to try to put things together too soon." Department Grows Since Prof. Christensen became chairman in 1955, the department has undergone considerable growth. Researchers are working on such varied projects as tumor growth, the collection of nutrients by the cell, virus activity, athero- sclerosis, and the properties of chloresterol. so we can recognize what is going on," he said. "We are concerned with human disease, but only as a part of the whole. The long-term satisfaction comes out of the belief that this is going to help us all. Money given for heart disease may end up furthering information on arthritis." Independence Provided Within the department, scien- tists work as individuals or small groups, under separate grants or subsidies which provide the in- vestigators with facilities for their work and grant them a certain de- gree of independence. The early stages of research in- clude training under senior re- searchers; later, students strike out on their own. The process of training is get- ting longer all the time, for "the time that it takes to get up to the frontier is getting greater all the while," Prof. Christensen added. No Lonely Labs I ROBERT H. MacRAE .. . evaluates social work legislation is "primarily to educate t he public," Lamb continued. "Many people in the cities don't understand the political advantage wielded by the farmers." A pri- mary task of Secretary of Agri- culture Taft Ezra Benson has been to educate the public on the farm policies. , The labor controversy is cen- tered around facets of the Land- rum-Griffin bill. "The major disagreement in Congress is over the organization and recognition of picketing," £ HELD, OVER DIAL NO 8-6416 2ND BIG WEEK Regents Accept $470,984 Including LargeFord Grant Gifts, grants and bequests total-w ling $470,984 were accepted by the Powere: Associated Spring C Regents of the University at their Consumers Power Co. and E monthly meeting yesterday._ Products Co. ,vans I ACADEMY AWARD The largest grant was from the Ford Foundation. sAmounting to Eas a $3,4 "We would like not simply to In the department, scientists do $350,000, it will be used for re- The analyze, but to isolate a process not live the lonely laboratory life search over a six-year period in donor EASTMANCL0OR WI CANptS and show how it is going on. We often imagined by the layman. In connection with a delinquency marke Aapet Films, Inc. Release FILM FESTIVAL hope to make it do its tricks in clean, sunlit labs, researchers use correction program in Chicago. Am the test tube-one step at a time- many modern devices. A grant of $27,398.43 was ac- given Through spectroscopy, complex cepted from the estate of Lewis Buildi radiation counting machines, cen- N. Cook to establish a fund for Oth trifuging, and chromatographic aid to medical students. fromi techniques, workers learn about Wayne State University has for ac VA P O Y .the composition and activities of given $15,400 for the maintenance ship; S 0 F SA S the living cell. Labs might even of the Institute of Labor and In- foral remind apartment dwellers of dustrial Relations, which they progr . . kitchens, complete with sink, a operate in cooperation with the the Be 0After M ichig ras dishwasher, and refrigeration for University. tinue, organic chemicals. A payment of $9,041.36 rep- 595.55 ra "'resented the first semi - annual Associ YOUU should payment from the Rockefeller public Foundation for an Institute for polita consider jol nl ng'Departm ent Social Research project. i from A gift for planning the utiliza- Co f Fors Center tion of the Fairlane estate and schola TH E M ICH IGAN DA IL Y grounds of the Dearborn Center Eigh BusinesCst i was granted in stocks totalling ap- giveni BuA Center for Research in Social proximately $7,500 by Edward L. tuaria sCne S aff Organization has been established Cushman. nors in the sociology department. The fourth quarterly payment Life1 The center will enhance inte- was accepted from the Michigan LifeI o a da*h tc b lloo sgration of teaching and research Heart Association for the Medical tional No Parades NO h ts, ba -ons, facilities in the sociology depart- School Dean's Fund, amounting to Insura lollpopsor fee rdesment and develops a balance be- $7,442,88, Nation 01 ip p' r reeriestween individual and group re- The Goodyear Tire and Rubber troit pse No booths search. Company granted $7,250 for the teerS for the kiddies It will also enable the depart- engineering college's research pro- pany ment to organize and represent gram in tires and suspension sys- Insur its teaching and research activi- tems. tiesto the professional public in Through the Michigan Alumni But r«- « you cdogail experience a way that will recruit superior Fund, Laurence H. Favrot gave students and solicit funds from $5,344.72 for the Phoenix Atomic Si Ac o nigAd etsn outside sources. Research Program. " AccountingAcAdvertising"A course in methods of inde- A total of $5,100 was accepted pendent study in social organiza- from the National Merit Scholar- " Finance .Layout' tion will be offered in order to shipTCorp.fr spplemental scho- w strengthen graduate training and aTwo grants were accepted from stude instruction. Parke, Davis & Co. to be used for schola The center's other responsibili- pharmacology research under Dr. ing th ties will include assisting the de- M. H. Seevers and for tissue cul- Jam velopment of theoretical aspects ture study under D. Donald J. study1 T RYOUT M EET ING April 29, 4:'15of social organization, establishing Merchant. The gifts totaled $3,875. eratun a reprint series for research and The balance of a $7,000 grant Germa theoretical papers and monographs from the James Foster Foundation Rob Orrop In Anytie and facilitating faculty and grad- in the amount of $3,500 for the study uate student research and study Journal of Conflict Resolution. Camb abroad for graduate students. Three companies have given a land. --__ -total of $3,500 through the De- Win velopment Council to aid in pro- the c viding a computer for the Indus- and t trial Engineering Dept. The donors Educa SPIFFY SAYS: Come to the ntat la .-- all restraint flies out! Whnta aywlsi IDETONY, DEAN JANET CURTIS -MARTIN «JEIGHI KIDDIE CARNIVALEAN 10:00-5:30 TODAY - v tman Kodak Co. has given 00 physics fellowship. Continental Oil Co. was the of $3,000 for a research eting fellowship. erican Cyanamid Co. has $3,000 for the Pharmacy ng Construction Fund. er grants included: $2,500 the Phillips Petroleum Co. chemical engineering fellow- $2,400 from General Motors high school physics teachers' am in Detroit; $1,750 from endix Aviation Corp. to con- a graduate fellowship; $1,- from the American Bar ation for assistance toward ation of a study of metro- n court problems; $1,500 the Universal Oil Products or a chemical engineering' rship. ht insurance companies have a total of $1,425 to the Ac- l Science Program. The do- were: New England Mutual Insurance Co., Shenandoah Insurance Co., Liberty Na- Life Insurance Co., Sun Life ance Co. of America, Bankers nal Life .Insurance Co., De- Mutual Insurance Co., Volun- State Life Insurance Com- and Washington National ance Co. idents Get holarships o University of Michigan nts will receive Fulbright arships for study abroad dur- he 1960-61 school year. nes A. Lange, Grad., will Germanic language and lit- re at the University of Bonn, any. Bert S. Dill, Jr., Grad., will history at the University of ridge's Clare College in Eng- nners were recommended by ampus Fulbright committee he Institute of International ation. DIAL NO 2-25 13 Notes Loss Of Passion By SANDRA JOHNSON "One of the costs of profes- sionalizing social work was the loss of the passion displayed by Miss Jane Addams, the American so- cial worker," Robert H. MacRae said recently. MacRae is executive director of the Metropolitan Chicago Welfarej Council. No Cold Discipline "Although I believe in profes- sional training for +social work," he added, "I do not want the fire and warmth of the b st social work practice to be extinguished by a cold and impersonal disci- pline. "Social workers have lost their passion for social justice. Today it is economists and labor leaders who stir the public conscience." Voluntary agencies are "sub- stantially inhibited" in their "pur- suit of a controversial issue" for fear of hurting their fund raising campaigns, he explained. Sees More Social Justice However, MacRae foresees "a tide in the motion toward greater social justice in America."' MacRae addressed approximately 600 men and women attending the eighth annual Social Work Pro- gress Institute held at the Uni- versity yesterday. Following this speech, Dean F. F. Fauri of the school of social work reported that his school has' made "a substantial increase in its enrollment, revised its curricu- lum, initiated a program for doc- torates in social work and doubled its faculty in the nine years since its establishment. THE. PROMETH EAN * OPEN DAILY at 2 P.M. Entertainment Nightly Now STATE aer THURSDAY "Visit To a Small Planet" Classified Advertising Number Is Now NO 2-4786 i6 TONIGHT and TOMORROW at 7:00 and 9:00 THE MAN BETWEEN with JAMES MASON CLAIRE BLOOM