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October 08, 1959 - Image 5

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1959-10-08

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

ust Submit

British 'U's To Present Programs

Scholarship
Applications
Applications for Marshall schol-
arships for study in British Uni-
versities during the next academic,
year must be turned in by Oct. 20,
Asst. Dean of Men Ivan W. Park-
er said yesterday.
Twelve awards are made each
year in the program, sponsored by
the British government in honor
of the Marshall Plan.
The prizes are divided regional-
ly, Parker said, with three going
to the Midwest area, which the
University is in.
For Two Years '
The scholarships are for two
years, and are worth about $1,400
cash, tuition fees and passage {to
and from Britain, he continued.
Both men and women compete,.
and married men receive an extra
$300 and passage for their fami-
lies.
There are no lower age limits,
either, Parker commented, but
there is an upper limit of 26,,
though sometimes students up to
28 may be selected.
Need 3.3 Average.
Parker said that extensive par-
ticipation in activities and a 3.3
grade point would merit close at-
tention by the University selection
committee, which will interview
the promising candidates.
Those selected will be sent, to
Chicago for interview to deter-
mine the three regional winners. '
Thus far, he said, no University
students have won 'awards.,
The University committee, Park-
er said, will consist of Prof. Lionel
Laing of the political science de-
partment, chairman, International
Center director James A. Davis,
and Mrs. Mary Brummage of the
business administration school.
Parker himself will be chairman.
Daily Classitieds
Bring Results

Underdeveloped Nations
Need Food, Aide Stresses

F

By CAROL LEVENTEN
Four British universities will
present four summer school pro-
grams in English literature, phil-
osophy, history, music and art this
summer.
University students Interested
in participating in any 'of the pro-
grams are invited to meet Frank
Jessup, representative of British
Universities summer school pro-
gram at 4:10 p.m. tomorrow in
'Rm. 2103 Angell Hall, Prof. Clark
Hopkins of the classical studies
department announced.
The courses offered are "Shakes-
peare and Elizabethan Drama,"
sponsored by the University of
Birmingham and held at Strat-
ford-upon-Avon, July 4 to Aug..
13 and "Art, Literature, and Music
in England from 1660 to 1780" at
the University of London from
July 11 to Aug. 19..
Oxford Offers Program
"England, 1870 to the Present,
History, Literature and the Arts"
will be offered at Oxford Univer-
sity from July 4 to Aug. 12; the
University of Edinburgh's sumnmer
program is "From Renaissance to
Revolution: History, Philosophy
and English Literature fron 1559
to 1789."
Courses are designed for teach-
ers, graduate students and juniors
and seniors. Typical British uni-
versity teaching methods will be
employed with formal lectures
available to all studeiats.
In the informal tutorial discus-
sions students will work in small
groups with their written work
supervised by the tutor. Students
doing research will have the op-
portunity to discuss their work
with British scholars.
Visits Arranged
Moreover, visits to places of cul-
tural and historical interest will
be arranged at each school.
At Stratford, "Shakespeare and
Elizabethan Drama" will be studied
under Profs. Allardyce Nicoll and
T. J. B. Spencer of the University
of Birmingham.
Aspects of the <drama of the
Elizabethan Age will be covered as

well as non-dramatic literature;
also, there will be lectures on Eliz-
abethan art, architecture and mu-
sic. Students will also see the Fes-
tival plays at the Stratford Me-
morial Theatre.,
Blunt To Direct
The program at the University
of London will be directed by Prof.
Sir Anthony Blunt, director of the
Courtauld Institute of Art and sur-
veyor of the Queen's Pictures;
Norman Callan, reader in English
at the University of London; Prof.
Paul Steinitz of the Royal Acade-
my of Music and conductor of the
London Bach Society and Mar-
garet Whitney, reader in the his-
tory of art at the University of
London.
Main writers to be studied are
Milton, Dryden, Pope, Swift, Field-
ing and Johnson as well as paint-
ers, from Van Dyck to Reynolds
and Gainsbroough. Special con-
certs to be arranged will include
works by Purcell, Handel, Arne,
and music from the Masque.
Directors for the survey of
"English Culture from 1870" at
Oxford are J. B. Bamborough,
senior tutor of Wadham College
and N. C. Hunt, tutor of Exeter
college, Oxford.
To Study Developments.
Main developments in govern-
ment, politics, literature, the visu-
al arts and music will alsb be
studied.
The Scottish Universities pro-
gram will be directed by Prof.
Henry Hamilton, dean and faculty
member of the University of Aber-
Lawyers' Club
Elects Johnson
New President
Robert G. Johnson, Grad., was
elected president of the Law Club
Tuesday.
In a-, runoff election yesterday
between Joseph Jerkins and Rob-
ert Rhoades, Grads;-Rhoades was
elected to the position of senior
class' representative to the Board
of Governors.
Neal Cooper, Grad., was elected
junior representative.,
Law students Joe Defley, John
Cusack, and., Robert Gambatese
were named senior class delegates'
on the Executive Council. Gregg
Austin and Jim Scannell will rep-
resent the junior class.
The Board of Governors is the
overall supervisory governing
group of the Lawyers' Club.
Representing the 350 students '
living in the Law Quad, the Exec-
utive Council serves as an admin-
istrative -Judiciary board for the
enforcement of rules, Johnson
said.
The Council also organizes the,
social schedule) and arranges the
speakers' program.

deen and N.A. Furness of the Uni-
versity of Edinburgh.
After an introductory view of
the Renaissance and Reformation,
a study of thought and culture in
Britain' against a European back-
ground will be emphasized.
Accommodations will be provid-
ed in residence halls or other fa-
cilities for students desiring them.
Scholarship information may be
obtained at the meeting or by
writing the Institute of Interna-
tional Education, 1 East 67th St.,
New York 21, N. Y.
Beckett Says
Flu Pro-tection
Shots Readied
Flu shots, protecting individuals
against all known strains of in-
fluenza, will be given from 8 to
11:30 a.m. and from 1 to 4:30 p.m.
today and on Oct. 15 in a clinic set
up in the basement of Health Serv-
ice.
The cost of the shots is $1.00
and Dr. Morley Beckett, Director
of University Health Service, rec-
ommended that students have two
shots, given two weeks apart.
Last Thursday, over 400 shots
were administered.
Organization]
Notices
(Use of this column for- an-
nouncements is available to offi-
cially recognized and registered or-
ganizations only. Organizations
planning to be active for the fall
semester should register by Oct. 10.
Forms available, 2011 Student Ac-
tivities Building.)
Congregational, Disciples, E & R Stu-
dent Guild, social action comm., Oct.
8, 12 noon, 524 Thompson.
Kappa Phi Clubmeeting, Oct. 8, 7:15
p.m., First Methodist Church.
SGC Public Relations Comm., com-
mittee meeting, Oct. 8, 4:15 p.m., 1548
SAB. Anyone interested is welcome to
come.
. * *
Univ. Coed Horseback Riding Club,
meeting, Oct. 8, 7 p.m., WAB. For in-
formation, call NO 3-7778.
* * *
Christian Science Org., regular testi-
mony meeting, Oct. 8, 7:30 p.m., Lane
Hall, Fireside Rm.
Baha'i Stud. Group, weekly meeting
-Last of lecture and discussion ses-
sions; Outline of the Baha'i World
Faith, Oct., 8, 8:30 p.m., 2021 Penn-
craft Ct. Everyone welcome. For trans-
portation, call NO 2-3548.
La Sociedad Hispanica, meeting, Oct.
8, 8 p.m., 3050 FB, Guitar Music, re-
freshments, dancing. Everyone welcome.
Wesley Grads, new interdenomina-
tional group for grad. students and
working young adults. Meeting, Oct. 9,
8:30 p.m., Green ERm.; First Methodist
Church. Discussion leader, Dr. H. Ru-
pert; "What Soes Life Add Up To?"
Refreshments.

3 WASHINGTON (M---DonPaarl-
berg, special economic assistant to
the President said yesterday that
the United States should send
even greater quantities of farming
know-how and food surpluses
abroad than it has been doing.
'In a lecture presented to the,
Agriculture, Department's Gradu-
ate School, Paarlberg said that,
since our relative strength so
greatly exceeds the Soviet Union,
in the field of agriculture, "there
is the opportunity to make this
section, rather than some others,
a major testing ground in our ri-
valry."
"It is clearly in our interest to
do so," he added.
The opportunity to use this su-
periority is great, Paarlberg ex-
plained, because the people of the
underdeveloped countries are pri-
marily farmers.
Can Communicate
"There is a kinship among farm
people throughout the world,"
Paarlberg said. "There is no bet-
ter medium by which we can com-
municate with these people than
through the thing they know best:
agriculture."
Paarlberg feels that switching
to such a rivalry to woo the un-
derdeveloped nations is better
than an arms race.
"But let us not be deluded," he
added. "It is a more subtle, softer,
longer-range but no less meaning-
ful contest."
Gives Opportunity
"Breathtaking changes in agri-
cultural technology of the recent
past," Paarlberg said, "give us the
opportunity to help the develop-
ing nations to help themselves, to
help build a political, economic
and social structure suited to their
aspirations and oriented toward
Medical Group
To Meet Here
Approximately 200 physicians
and scientists of the Society of
Nuclear Medicine are expected to
attend a one-day meeting here on
October 11.
The meeting is sponsored by the
University's Medical Center, Ann
Arbor's St. Josephs Hospital and
theVeterans Administration Hos-
pital.
Speakers from the University,
Veterans Administration, Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania, Henry Ford
Hospital and the Edsel Ford Insti-
tute for Medical Research will par-
ticipate.
The meeting will be held in the
Cooley Memorial Building on the
University's North Campus. It is
open to' all persons interested in
nuclear medicine.

freedom, therewith to strengthen
the free world in its struggle with
the forces of totalitarianism."
Paarlberg warned that Ameri-
cans must not have any illusion
that "if only the material needs
of the developing nations can be
met, these nations will renounce
Communism."
"The mind and the spirit are
concerned as well as the stomach,"
he explained. "Food is an essen-
tial but not a sufficient condition
for the development of free insti-
tutions."

ALPHA RHO CHI
6440oxford
PROFESSIONAL ARCHITECTURE
AND DESIGN FRATERNITY
will have RUSHING SMOKERS
Thursday, Oct. 8 - 7:30-8:30
Monday, Oct. 12 --7:30-8:30
Tuesday, Oct. 13 - 7:30-8:30
ALL College of Arch. & Design students
Fine Arts Civil Engineers Naval Architects

11

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