TIE MIHIi GAN DAILY SUNiiAY, ARM, 9, ~1!'i1 16 1 A FACULTY FOR KNOWING: Freneb Pays DebI' U for Psychologist Newcomb 't.if,+n V.f. h c i H n~ in ._ (Fdinor's note: This is the lo n a series of weekly articles on faculty personalities.) Prof. Theodore M. Newcomb, of the psychology and sociology de- partments, graduated from Ober- lin College in 1924 as a French major, taught French for 'a year to pay off his college debts, and went to Columbia for a Ph.D. in education. Skipping a masters degree, Prof. Newcomb says he wound up get- ting his Ph.D. in psychology be- cause the psychology courses were more "exciting" than any others and he decided that he belonged in the field. Taught Psychology After-getting his Ph.D., Prof. Newcomb taught academic psy- chology courses at various uni- versities. It soon became obvious, he said that "you can't explain in- dividual behaviour by studying in- dividuals alone -- you need to understand their society. In order to be a good human psychologist, I needed sociology." As a result, he said he became an "amateur sociologist." Prof. Newcomb says a good deal of his education in sociology came from an "ambitious study" he ton College in the 1930's. The study revolved around student at- SiglerDoolittle Will Speak at 'Air' Banquet' Governor Kim Sigler and Lt. Gen. James Doolittle will be speakers at a banquet given by the National Intercollegiate Air Meet, May 31 at the League: The meet, to be held here May 30 through June 1, will have Gen. Doolittle as the honorary chief starter. The air meet, the first of its kind to be held here sincethe war, will use Willow Run Airport. More than 25 flying clubs, representing colleges and universities through- out the country, have indicated that they will take part in the meet. Sponsored by the National Avi- ation Association and Aero Club of Michigan, representatives of the University Flying Club, Wayne University, Detroit University and Michigan State College are ar- ranging the meet. Richard Illing, Grad, is chair- man. made while teaching at Benning- titudes and how they developed as they did on public issues. As these were the depression years nd the time of the inception of the New Deal, Prof. Newcomb said it was an ideal time for such a study. "Personality in a Vacuum" "It started as a study of per- sonality, and ended as a study of personality in the community," he said. This was inevitable, he de- clared, for "if you don't get into the sociological side,* you study personality in a vacuum - as some psychologists do." Prof. Newcomb came to the Un- iversity in 1941 as an associate professor in sociology. "I was par- ticularly pleased to be asked to come here as a book that had in- fluenced me greatly was by Prof. Thomas Cooley, wh. for many years was chairman of the sociol- ogy department here." Prof. New- comb said that he, as a social psychologist, had been invited to join the sociology department here as the Cooley tradition had estab- lished social psychology in the so- ciology department. Since 1945, Prof. Newcomb and some of his courses have been accredited to the psychology department as well as the sociology. Off to Washington - The war took Prof. Newcomb to Washington (January, 1942) where he did propaganda analysis. His job was to record foreign propaganda, analyse it, and turn the analysis over to the war de- partment and other government agencies. Prof. Newcomb returned to cam- pus in the fall of 1944, but a month later he was back in Wash- ington. This time the assignment was to survey civilian morale in Germany, working under Prof. Rensis Likert, director of the Sur- vey Research Center, who was head of the project. Prof. New- comb spent the summer of 1945 in Germany working on the sur- vey. He returned, this time to stay, in the fall of 1945. "A Lively Interest" Prof. Newcomb boasts a lively interest in contemporary affairs, in line with which he commented that he believes in "student par- ticipation in current affairs." "I have a lively conviction that students are citizens, and they have the same rights of free speech, assembly, and press as all citizens," he said. Blood Donors Now fNeedld By Red Cross Civilian Clinic Calls For 500 Volunteers Five hundred blood donors are still needed to volunteer for the fourth civilian bood4 donor clinic, to be conducted by the Red Cross in cooperation with the Michigan Department of Health, from April 28 to May 2, Prof. Arthur E. R. Boak, chairman of the Washtenaw County Red Cross Blood Donor Committee, announced yesterday. The donated blood, processed into plasma by laboratories of the Michigan Department of Health, will be made available without cost to patients in St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital, in Ann Arbor; Beyer Hospital, in Ypsilanti; and Saline General Hospital. An average of 64 pints of blood plasma armonth are used by the hospitals for emergency purposes and also to build up patients be- fore operations., Donors must be between the ages of 18 and50, and must weigh at least 115 pounds. A blood type card will be made for each donor. This can be car- ried by the donor so that in case of an accident necessitating emergency transfusions, valuable time will be saved in typing the patient's blood. Registrations for the clinic, which will be held in the G.A.R. rooms in the city hall, may be made by calling the Red Cross at 2-5546. Church News The CANTERBURY CLUB will meet at 6 p.m. today for supper and a discussion led by Murray Kenney, chairman of the Ohio. Department of Youth. The Schola Santorum will fur- nish the music for the Choral Eve- ning Prayer Service, which will be followed by a coffee hour. A meeting of the WESLEYAN GUILD will be held at 6:30 p.m. today. Dr. Robert A. Millikan, Cali- fornia Tech physicist, will speak on "The Release and Utilization of Atomic Energy." & . * The film "Pastorale" will aug- ment the meeting and worship service to be held by the WEST- MINSTER GUILD at 5 p.m. to- day. Rev. James Van Pernis will ad- dress the group on "The Church in Social Action." The program will be followed by supper and a fellowship hour. Student Fined for Reckless Flying Charles T. Van Dusen, '48E, pleaded guilty to charges of reck- less flying before acting Munici- pal Judge Ledru Davis yesterday, and paid $58 fine and o'osts. Van Dusen, an officer in the Army Air Corps Reserve, was ar- rested Friday by deputy sheriffs after his plane, an AT 6 based at Selfridge Field, crash-landed at Geddes and Dixboro. He was un- injured. Complaints also had been received from Pittsfield residents that he had been flying below le- gal limits recently. The plane, which suffered only minor damages, was immediately dismantled and removed by the Army. JUDY GREENGARD Lead in Shaw Play Is Given To Greengard Judy Greengard, speech de- partment student, will play the role of Joan of Arc in George Ber- nard Shaw's "Saint Joan," to be presented by the speech depart- ment's play production classes Thursday through Saturday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Other leading members of the cast are James Holmes, as the archbishop who turns Joan over to her enemies; Dick Stewart as the Earl of Warwick, Donald F. Clapp as the French Dauphin who is crowned king by Joan, and Joyce' Katz as Mme. de la Tremouville. The play, one of the most out- standing of the many works on the life of the French martyr, is also one of the most elaborate to pro- duce. The six scenes each require a change of sets, all of which will be constructed by students in the speech department's stagecraft classes under the direction of Robert Mellencamp. Set in 15th century France, the story of Joan is taken through her victories over the British and her subsequent death at stake to an epilogue in which she appears years after her death to be canon- ized by the Church. 'Tickets for the production., will go on sale at the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre box office tomorrow. Mail orders are being accepted now for all performances, includ- ing the Saturday matinee. French Circle TIo Give Play Moliere's "Le Malade Imagin- aire," a comedy-ballet, will be giv- en by members of Le Cercle Fran- cais, Tuesday, May 6 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Moliere satirizes medicine and the medical profession in the play, which concerns an "imaginary in- valid." First produced in 1673 in Paris, the three-act play was per- formed 1,315 times in one Paris theatre between 1860 and 1933. The play will be presented by an all-student cast and will be direct- ed by Prof. Charles E. Koella, of the Romance Languages depart- ment. The cast includes Richard Kop- pitch, Sonya Drews, Marian Say- ward, Amy Wallace, Sarah Wilcox, James Evans, David Brodman, Murray Budney, Stevens Hajos, Forrest Palmer, Charles Lehmann Unty to Hold' Plans for NSO Week Will Be Discussed The Unity Committee, set up by 17 major campus organizations this winter to discuss the purpose of the Chicago Student Confer- ence, will be revived tomorrow when organization representatives meet at 4 p.m. in the Union to make plans for National Student Organization Week. The groups will meet with mem- bers of the Student Legislature's social, student organizations, pub- licity and gripes committees to discuss the informational rally and social event which will highlight the NSO observance, planned from April 28 to May 3. .Tom Walsh, Michigan Region representative, asked that all cam- pus organizations send delegates to the meeting, which will be open to the public. Michigan NSO To Meet Today The Michigan Region, made up of National Student Organization representatives f r o m Michigan campuses, will convene at 1 p.m. today in the Union to discuss the forthcoming elections of delegates to the NSO's constitutional con- vention. Delegates from the University of Detroit, Michigan State College, Wayne University and other Mich- igan schools will attend the con- ference, which is open to the pub- lic. Many of the delegates will be students who represented their col- leges at the Chicago Student Con- ference in December. Copies of the NSO's proposed constitution will be available at the meeting. Smith Earns Booth Award Ann Arbor Student Wills $1,000 Prize Lynn C. Smith, of Ann Arbor, has been awarded first prize of $1,000 in the George G. Booth Travelling Fellowship Competi- tion, Wells I. Bennett. Dean of the architecture college announced yesterday. The fellowship will enable its holder to travel in the United States or abroad. The competition, the first held since the war, was open to seniors and graduate students in the architecture college. Charles Perman, John Bickell and James Blair, all seniors in the architecture college, were second, third and fourth place winners, re- spectively. The judges, faculty members of the architecture college and prac- ticing architects, were Professors Roger Bailey, Ralph Hammett, Fred C. Odell and George B. Brig- ham, Jr. and architects Kenneth Black, Robert Frantz, Amadeo Loene and Lilburn Woodworth. Read and Use Daily Classified Ads By HAROLD JACKSON, JR. Next Thursday is final exami- nation for one school in Ann Ar- bor in which the students haven't dared to play hookey-aU the teachers have been policemen. The students, 40 members of the Ann Arbor Police Department and 12 officers of the Washtenaw County Sheriff's office, finished their last class Tuesday afternoon and are spending the weekend cramming for the exam, which, ac- cording to Captain Rolland J. Gainsley, will be conducted strict- ly on the "honor system." Began in February The school began its classes Feb. 4. It was established jointly by the Ann Arbor City Police Com- mission, of which Prof. 0. W. Stephenson, of t h e education school, is chairman; the Washte- naw County Sheriff's Office, and the Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion. It served both to train new policemen and to orient veteran officers on new laws and methods of policework. The course of study covered every angle of law enforcement in- cluding rules and regulations, pub- lic relations, laws of evidence and arrest, search procedure, finger- prints, raids, court procedure and defensive tactics. Lecture Given Among the speakers at the bi- weekly lectures were Police Chief C. M. Enkemann, Captain Gains- ley, Sheriff John L. Osborn, State Police Commissioner Don Leonard and 11 FBI agents. Actual firearm training will be given to all men who have com- pleted the school course during the week of May 19 at the Ann Arbor police range. It is estimated that each man will receive 18 hours of actual practice with pistols, rifles, and machine guns. All the officers in the Ann Arbor police department spent the same amount of time in school as did the patrolmen, according to Cap- tain Gainsley, who revealed that Chief Enkemann is the only mem- ber of the department who isn't worried about the forthcoming ex- amination-he doesn't have to take it. 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