THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 22,-1951 __.y ___ ._ _ _ _. v __.Y_ s __ _______- __ BOARD CREATED: allery To Head Institute Board of Regents yester- ,ablished a Board of Gover- mnd appointed a director new Institute of Industrial Institute was created Dec. conjunction with a $1,500,- )nation made by General Corporation to the Phoe- oject. rod Mallery, Jr., a professor e cts 10 Given at in the Medical School and chief of the clinical laboratories in Uni- versity Hospital, was appointed di- rector. He joined the hospital staff in 1941 as a resident physician. Dr. Mallery was named an in- structor in the Medical School in 1942 and became a professor in 1946. THE SIX-MAN Board of Gov- ernors will serve as a policy- making body responsible for the direction and supervision of the Institute's activities. President Alexander G. Ruthven was ap- pointed chairman of the board. The Institute is designed to study many fields of education- al and research activities in- cluding the prevention.diagno- Bayly TOGive Speech Series On Christianity ndelssohn speech department will pre- .e fourth and last bill of one r the season Thursday and in the Lydia Mendelssohn e. playwrights, ranging from n Shakespeare to University ,te student Mrs. Jacqueline n, a 11 o s hi sed n f n's p s cal firs be L and s in he bi tury tant >-sop ard's y cor reds ed i Rig d 0 ve a m. ets 10 e bo will be represented on Joseph T. Bayly, eastern region- f four works. Shake- al secretary of the Inter-Varsity story "Henry V" will be Fellowship series will deliver a ser- to five scenes taking 45 ies of four speeches on Christian- or the program. Mrs. ity this week as speaker for the play, an allegorical fan-. University Christian Mission. lled "Century." Bayly will speak at 7:30 p.m. t acts of Noel Coward's tomorrow through Thursday in ives" and Edward Per- Kellogg Auditorium on the rele- Reginald Denham's vancy of the Christian doctrines Retirement" will com- to everyday life. ill. The topic for the talk tomorrow y" is concerned with the will be, "Can God Be Discovered?" s of a forest who evolve On spcceeding days he will dis- ng period of time into cuss "Insecurity-The Student's histicates of modern so- Dilemma," "Are Jesus' Teachings Relevant?" and "Finding Faith." s play is a sophisticated Sponsored by the Michigan ncerned with two sets of Christian Fellowship, the Mission and their somewhat speeches will be supplemented by honeymoons on the group discussions which are sche- viera. duled to take place in dormitories in an actual ,Victorian and houses throughout the cam- Ladies in Retirement" pus. Leading the discussions will n air of mystery to the be six assistants of Bayly and two members of the University faculty, for the bill will go on Prof. Gowon Van Wylan of the a.m. Wednesday in the engineering college and Prof. Ken- ix office. They will cost j neth Pike of the linguistics de- partment. I Sis and treatment of occupa- tional diseases. GM President Charles E. Wilson had described the aims of the Institute as implementing, per- petuating and expanding the cor- poration's present employe health maintainance and research pro- grams, THE REGENTS also accepted gifts totaling $67,515. The largest was a $25,000 grant from L. J. Montgomery of Battle Creek for the Bronchial Asthma Research Fund. During the same meeting the Regents approved the appoint- ment of five professors to the faculty. Prof. Abraham Kaplan was named as a visiting pro- fessor in the philosophy depart- ment for the academic year 1951-52. Prof. Robert A. McCleary has been appointed to the psychology department. At present an in- structor at Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, he will teach an under- graduate course in physiological psychology in addition to labora- tory, seminar and research duties. Named to the zoology deart- ment as a genetics teacher, Prof. David L. Nanney will instruct in graduate and undergraduate courses. The remaining two new ap- pointments were Prof. Patricia W. Rabinovitz in the new School of Social Work and Prof. Andre S. Dreiding in the chemistry depart- ment. *. * * LEAVES OF ABSENCE were granted to Dr. Maurice H. Seever, chairman of the pharmacology department, and Prof. Malcolm H. Soule, chairman of the bacterio- logy department. They will ac- company a 12-man medical edu- cation mission to Japan. Three emeritus titles were con- ferred by the Regents. They were given to Wilfred B. Shaw, direc- tor emeritus o alumni relations; John F. Shepard, professor emer- itus of psychology; and John G. Winter, professor eieritus of La- tin languages and literature. New Booklets To Be Issued For the first time in the his- tory of the graduate school, spe- cial commencement announce' ments will be available to candi- dates for an advanced degree. Booklets, listing members of the Executive Board, administrative officers and candidates for de- grees, will also be printed. Leather bound volumes will be about 75 cents each, while those bound in cardboard will cost approximately 50 cents. Fold announcements at 15 cents each will also be available. Per- sonal cards to send with these an- nouncements may be ordered in lots of 100 at $.00 per lot. Those students who wish to take advantage of this new fea- ture may sign the list in the Ad- ministrative Offices in Rackham before April 23. Unless enough students show interest, the project will be dropped. Psych Class To Surveyt U' Attitude Student attitudes toward the University will be examined in a two week survey conducted by the; students of the psychology 185t class, Prof. Angus Campbell of the psychology department announced yesterday.a The survey, which is being car- ried outeincooperation with the Survey Research Center, is de-7 signed to query approximately 400 students on what they expect to, get from their college education. The names of the 400 students taking part in the survey were tak- en at random from the complete list of enrolled students. Postcards will be sent to the selected students requesting them to come to an in- terview where the survey questions will be asked. Although Administration offi- cials have expressed interest ih the findings of the group, Prof. Camp- bell emphasized that the basic pur- pose of the survey is to give the students of psychology 185 ex- perience in poll-taking methods. Pollock Gets Post Prof. James K. Pollock, chair- man of the political science de- partment, has been awarded the *presidency of the Foundation for a Unified, Democratic Germany in a United Europe, it was announced yesterday. COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Deportation, Flag Tricks Top Campus Problems OLD IRONCLADS-The USS Monitor, known to many as 'a cheese box on a raft,' is shown locked in mortal combat with the Confederate ship, the Merrimac, on March 9, 1862 off Hampton Roads, Virginia. * * 'Save the Monitor' Says 'U' Midshipman's Club By WENDY OWEN .Deportation charges filed against two students and some flag shenanigans topped the college news this week. The Daily Texan reported that immigration officials arrested a junior engineering student from Iraq and one Israeli student on "undesirable alien" charges. An at- torneyfrom the AmericangCivil Liberties Union is defending the Iraqi and will apply for a writ of habeas corpus. The other student will be assisted by relatives in Galveston. According to one University of Texas official "all this publicity probably ruined their chances of finishing this semester." Previous- ly, "a lot of groundwork had been laid toward 'getting a stay of sen- tence until after this semester." THE FLAGPOLE, in the news Fowler To Speak, On Law Problems Cody Fowler, president of the American Bar Association, will speak on the topic, "The Practical, Problems of' Young Lawyers" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 100 of .Hutchins Hall. The Student Bar Association is sponsoring Fowler's appearance and the speech is open to the pub- lic. at the University of Washington, was a decorative spire atop one of the administrative buildings. Though almost completely weath- eged away, students found it useful for displaying first, a red Cossack jacket and then a dirty white table cloth. Both "flags" required roofing crews to remove them. After the second display, the Daily Wash- ington reported that the spire was to be removed, so it could no longer be used by student pranksters. At the University of Illinois, a home-made Communist flag, com- plete with yellow hammer-and- sickle alarmed townspeople when it was prominently displayed be- fore a local fraternity house. The folks complained to the police who forced its removal. LOW COST SEMINARS 1For students during July and August under the auspices of the Inter- University Jewish Federation of Greatr 'Britain and Ireland, and the French Union of Jewish students. for Information, Writer newish Educational Travel Organization SO West-45th Street, New York 19, N.T. By RON WATTS A cry "Save the Monitor," now sweeping the nation, was picked up in Ann Arbor yesterday with a vigor that may be heard to the depths of Davy Jones' locker. The slogan which began in the offices of the Harvard Crimson at Cambridge, Mass. and was picked up by the University Midshipmen's Club called for the salvage of the historical ironclad USS Monitor. They want to make a national monument of the ship. * * * "AS MIDSHIPMEN in the United States Navy, we are proud to join the committee of 'American Patriots for Raising the Monitor'," Fred Fischbach, '52, president of the Midshipmen's Club asserted. The Monitor was a Yankee ironclad ship which gained fame in a battle with the Confederate ship Merrimac on March 9, 1862 in Hampton Roads, Virginia. The encounter was outstanding as the first battle between ironclad warships in the history of the world. "When we learned that a Navy anti-submarine patrol had discov- ered the Monitor off Cape Hatteras where she floundered in a gale December 31, 1862, our breasts swelled with patriotic fervor," the founding group at Harvard claimed. * * * MEANWHILE, the midshipmen were feverishly debating what should be the final resting place of the Monitor when it has been restored. One sailor speculated that with all the fire President Truman has been under lately, the Monitor might be turned over to him to re- place the present presidential yacht, USS Williamsburg. However, there was opposition among some students toward the Midshipmen's Club supporting such a move. "If the Student Af- fairs Committee recognizes an or- ganization pledged to salvage that ship, I'll secede from the Univer- sity," Ken Swords, '51, from Miami, Fla., asserted. Kelly To Speak At Dedication Harry F. Kelly, former governor of Michigan, will deliver the main address today at the dedication cerembnies of the new Catholi Youth Center. University Regent, Roscoe 0 Bonisteel, will also take part ir the program which is schedule to begin at 3 p.m. at the Center 538 N. Division. The Center, formerly known a. the Cornwall Home, was purchas- ed by St. Thomas Church las April. Since August more than 20( persons have contributed theit la- bors to make the house suitable for recreational uses. 1 1 r n c n d , S .t a Il 1. For those Summer days just around the corner .f.. BOOK S E AMPHIBIOUS AUTO: Watery Smashup Creates UniqueLegal Complications A. ;. Qt F LLETTs State Street at North University - ---- M- OMM" "" By JOHN BRILEY Whether an auto driver who pulls out of an intersection with- out even tooting his fog horn and smacks into a passing boat should be sued or " sunk is the problem facing police captain Jack Flyfield of McGregor, Ia. The problem came up when a car being driven through the water collided with the boat Flyfield was navigating down a flooded street in Prairie Du Chien, Wis. * * AL BLUMROSEN '53L, pointed out that a jury would have to de- 9 Nickels Arcade 217 S. Main St. 1 cide if the auto driver was under any duty to exercise- due care and whether he breached that duty by not acting as a reasonable man would towards a motor boat cruis- ing down the street. "And in deciding if the cap- tain had contributed to the ac- cident by negligence on his part, the jury would have to decide if he drove his motor boat as a rea- sonably prudent man would drive a motor boat down a city street," Tom Walsh, '51L, added. The auto driver's biggest mis- take, Blumrosen contended, was not hiting a boat, but hitting a boat driven by a police captain. The Wisconsin auto driver must have thought the same thing for he rolled his window down after the collision and apologised, ex- plaining he had no brakes because of the high water. Police Captain Flyfield, perhaps thinking of the legal maze he might precipitate by hasty action, replied amiably, "That's all right, I don't have any brakes either." J. C. COUSINS STATE STREET A. i . I "", +. , ~ ,. Floating Bouffants ENGINEERS Receiving bachelors & graduate degrees in AERONAUTICAL MECHANICAL ELECTRICAL Investigate Career Opportunity That May Be Available For You in Aerodynamics as applied to the aircraft propulsion means. Experimental stress analysis. Development of electro- mechanical parts. Experimental test engineering. THE PROPELLER DIVISION CURTISS-WRIGHT CORP. 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