Sunday, October 20, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday 1 Ocoe 0 94TEMCIA ALaeFv - Fi di g a la e fo t e gi t d: .. . .. .. . .. .**"**"~**''*."4 "." ..}.:"r:n:nv *'r"r«?tii"?*.' '."': i::iS... i}°. . Findin a laceforiDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETN Do they belong in universities?..--- ---------.-.. Day Calendar Monday, October 21 PEP Project," P&A Coiloq Rm t : i (Continued from Page 3) the feeling of being odd." Even parents who are aware of the problem find it difficult to deal with, and the reactions of other adults are always unnredict- able. "Greg is shy, a little bit tense," Ketcham says from his experience with the boy. "He's a little bit tentative when he meets someone. He suspects everybody's looking at him as being way out or bizarre . I suspect that Greg Wellman, when he meets a new person, he's wondering what they're thinking." Overall, though, he considers Greg "well-adjusted." But Bookstein was by his own admission a totally different case, a case in which the atti- tudes of adults and the prob- lem of playing up to the image of "the genius" profoundly col- ored all his social relations. "MATH PRODIGIES ARE treated with whimsical ad- miration and confusion . . . I felt adults were treating me as unusual and I used it as ego food. It's all sugar: there's no protein in it and the result is rot." It seems that the intellectual and social habits he developed in high school and college are things he would like to forget. Talking about that part of the past, he' never cracks a smile.' "I lived in Frost House in Markley. People thought I was 'cute' so I played up to that. I picked up some obnoxious habits and touted my superior- ity. I lost a lot of chances to make friends." public exposre ten years agyo. One prof'ssor who knows him rem., rked, 'The poor kid was gobbled up as a twele-year-old. People would come up to him at MSU and say. "Hey, genius, what are you going to discover today?" (O THE QUESTION is still un- answered. No one is quite sure what to do with children who demonstrate an intellectual ability that is years ahead of "'1'yin; in high school would he stoiltifyirig," says Dr. Julian Stanley, director of the Hopkins project, "and that would cause emotional and social problems . . . Getting ahead in academic affairs promotes personal and social adjustment.'' 'THERE IS ONE POINT on which they all agree. Just as the popular belief in the dan- gerous nature of childhood pre- cocity goes far back in our cul- Sunday, October 20 TV Ctr.: TheMusic Shop: Mak- ing Movie Music, WWJ TV, chan- nel 4, noon. Music School: Susan Charney, violin, Recital Hall, 2:30 pm. Musical Society: Alvin Alley Amer. Dance Thtr., Power Ctr., 3 pm. Faculty Chamber Concert: Moz- art, Schubert, Rackham Aud., 4 pm. City Ctr. Acting Co.: Chekhov's Three Sisters, Power Ctr., 7 pm. Music School: Symphony Orches- tra, Theo Aleantra, conductor, Hill Aud., 8 pm. WUOM: Panel discus day's Congress," with se leader, Hugh Scott, &1 ard Bolling, house ref cate, 10 am. Ctr. Russian; E. Europe Lawrence Orton, Oaklaw lish Politics and the Uk tionai Movement in Galic Commons Rm., Lane Hal STAFS: Faculty semi: Mazrui. "Africa Towards W. Conf. Rm., Rackha pm. High Energy Seminar: son. U. of Calif., Berk ssion n. Rep, orm an d U ran cia i l, n nar, 20 Im, L. cele3 4:15 pm. n, "To- A-v Ctr.: Totem; Pas de Deux; minority Paul Taylor and Co.: AnAArtist and p, Rich- his Work, Pendelton, Arts Info. advo- Ctr.. 8 pm. UM-Dearborn: James Tatum Studies: Trio, Sisson Rm., Fair Lane Ctr, U., "Po- 8 pm. Ian Na- Career Planning & Placement in 1848," 3200 SAB, 764-7456 oon. Recruiting on Campus: Sept. 30- Ali A. Oct. 3-Action Peace/Corps/Vista- 00 AD," All Majors; Oct. 1-Firestone Tire noon-2 & Rubber - Math & Chem ma- jors; Oct. 2 - Eli Lilly & Co.- Steven- B's & M's in Comp. Sci. y, "The Mademoiselle's Coll. Bd. Guest Editor Competition:nAssignment 1 dlue Nov. 1; 14 winners will spend r salaried month as guest editors. For more details check DOB file at CP&P. Urologic Physician's Asst. Prog.- sci. majors with BS, 2 yr. grad. prog. at U. of Cin. Med. Ctr. Write for info: Prof. Arthur T. Evans, M.D., U. of Cin. Med Ctr., 234 Goodman St., Cin, OH 45229. Work in Washington, D.C. This Summer sponsored by Washindton Summer Intern Progrom Positions in Congre~sional Offices, Executive Agencies, Lobbying Organizations, N e ws Media, Research Organizations (UNDERGRADUATES ONLY) MASS ME ETING Wednesday-7:30-Oct. 23 Rackham Amphitheater GET HERE .. . any way you can and Join WE NEED YOU ! Be it advertising, editorial or sports- ATTEND A HALLOWEEN PARTY AT 114 E. WASHINGTON Downtown Location Thurs., Oct. 31 WEAR A COSTUME There will be PRIZES & DANCING PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM presents ITT CE TE Love's Labour's Lost OCT. 24 THROUGH 30 Mendelssohn Theatre Thurs- Sat. at 8 PM Sun at 7 PM For ticket information call 764-0450 Interestingly e n o u g h, the same things that Wellman likes about pure math are the things that ultimately drove Bookstein away from the field. It was never made clear to him how"to apply his'mathe- matical knowledge, he claims, Bruno B and when he entered graduate their peers. A local psychoio- school at Harvard, he became terpes oa scoo painfully aware of the "lack of gist, Dr. Donald Rossi, agrees continuity between mathemati- with Bettleheim that rapid ac- cal thoyueteandathemngi-gceleration can be dangerous and cal thoughts and the ongong. advises creating academic pro- world." While Wellman doesn't avsscetn cdmcpo warnt.WhimathpiWedmndontgrams that would challenge want his math pinned down to these children while keeping "little physical bodies moving: them as close as possible to around," Bookstein feels the their own age group. Even tendency to keep the two realmst Lewis Terman, an early author- divorced is what distorted his ity on the subject who recoi- perception. "The undergradu- mended acceleration for most ate mathematician doesn't have genedclern 19rm ,s to relate to people because he gifted children, wrote in 1950, o elsth sp mole e s "Although there are some chil- only deals with symbos." dren who could be made ready for ninth grade at nine or ten HE ENTIRE VENTURE has years, and for college at 13 or left him with many regrets. 14, such extreme instances of "I enjoyed being called a 'gen- acceleration in our gifted group ius,' but a ghastly feeling of have usually had unfortunate fraud came over me later. I results." was never a genius . . . I was On the other hand, psvcholo- simply a math prodigy of a gists at Johns Hopkins Univer- particular type: a good problem sity in Baltimore have been solver with a quick and reten- seeking out mathematically tive mind." precocious children and enroll- He quit the math department ing them at the university at at Harvard after only four thirteen, fourteen, and fifteen weeks and transferred into so- years of age since 1970. They ciology. He wasn't happy there claim they have had enormous either, and after five dilatory success, and the old stereotype years of study in the depart- of the emotional infant inside ment, he was finally given a the body of the intellectually ad- masters degree. But in the vanced student simply does not process, he learned something, stand up. he says. His social ability de- veloped through his part-time tutoring activities and he slow- ly learned to be gentle. He got married four months ago,' and though his social behavior "is still very erratic and I have a NCwAccepting habit of dumping on people," hefNoweAcceptgng feels he's come a long way. There have been other exam- SPRIN G ples of highly gifted students at the University; in fact, one ofDirector the most amazing stories of childhood precocity in recent Choreog times involves' a student now on the campus. Michael Grost, Mus who made nationwide news in 1964 when he entered Michigan Pick up application in State University at the age of of Mich. Union and sic 11, is now a doctoral candidate For info.--call 763-11 0 and teaching fellow in the math department. He declined to be: APPLICATIONS interviewed for this article, very possibly due to a distaste fore publicity that stems from his ettelheim tural history (Shakespeare wrote, "So wise so young, they say, do never live long"), the rapid advancement and aca- demic success of children is nothing new either. As Dr. Ket- charn points out, "Goethe took his baccalaureate from the Uni- versity of Heidleberg at the age of sixteen." Hove a flair for artistic writinq? If you are interest- ed in revoi e w in poetry.ad ui or wr iting feature_ stories about the drama. dance, film airts: Contact Arts Editor, c/'o The Michigan Daily. iTTAWILL R Lf.CT de ev db4 c HUJZ s 5 PIM. Adv Applications for SH OW rapher Cal Director UAC office, 2nd floor gn up for an interview. 7 P DUE OCT. 21 I I Ij MOM ~1,J~jI ~1 ' ' tat H ILL EL Sunday, Oct. 20, 1974 11:00 a.m.-UNDERGRAD BRUNCH Bagels-Lox-Cream Cheese 6:00 p.m.-DELI All you can eat for $2.00 1429 HILL ST. C 9:30-9:30 MON.-SA ' HAIRCUT, HOUSE BRI~AWOODMALL i...--- i i qmffir'i HAIR CARE PROBLEMS? Consult Our Team of Trained Hair Analysts (t 1 .. t i R FRI.-MON.-TUES.-THURS. at 7 & 9 p.m. Only' SAT.-SUN.-WED. at 1-3-5-7-9 p.m. HELD OVER 2ND WEEK Nathan Frank Mike Jack arefree & Natural Hair Styles for Active 'Men & Women a T. 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