I PAGE FOUR rjflj MICUIGiAN liAILY fAl' A A Y, A.i A iWti 5, 1954 A SET-BACK? The Legislature's Proposals Pro... WHAT STUDENT Legislature in effect said to the Student Affairs Study Committee Wednesday night was "turn your attention from your charts a moment and consider us." If this can be seen as a set-back to the study group, then a set-back of sorts is what was needed. Considering the two proposals and tie corresponding fact that the group which made them is being reorganized out of its occasionally-reached place in the sun, it is difficult to see just why they should be interpreted as a no-confidence vote in the study committee's work. SL first asked that any reorganization plan be okayed by the students before it was set up to govern them; second, that the study group appoint more students to its ranks since it now has the entire campus, not just the SAC, under its reoragnizing eye. (Grant- ed that the study group has only rec- ommending powers - its recomienda- tions can potentially be very well received.) The first proposal, it seems, is unquestion- ably valid, and the second, although not di- rected to the President, the proper source, is at least worthy of close consideration. But more meaningful than the proposals themselves is the fact that SL, acting as a body, made them. Probably members of the SL cabinet could have worked directly with the committee in making their suggestions; maybe the proposals, and in the long run the SAC committee's final plan, would have stood a better chance of being accepted with- out what some regard as the SL taint. Working behind the scenes, however, is advantageous only up to a point, and both SL and the study committee have reached that point. Wednesday night's motions- an expression of public awareness of the reorganization work-did not hit the com- mittee during the formative period when outside interference only confuses the is- sues. They came at a time when the com- mittee, well past the preliminary stages, was primarily interested in getting the most in efficiency and coordination from its basic and pretty well accepted plan. Unfortunately, efficiency and coordina- tion can easily become separate little worlds, and public intervention - the knowledge that someone is looking over your shoulder as you chart away-is the best means of counteracting this ten- dency. The fact that SL's motions were sponta- neous and unrehearsed with study commit- tee members is nothing to their discredit. Spontaneity has occasionally brought very nice things from SL, and if efficiency has not been one of them, it is because the two qualities have always had a hard time liv- ing together. The study committee, which seems t) take efficiency so much to heart, might leave room in its admittedly difficult work for SL's virtue as well. -Virginia Voss Con . .. BUSY CONTEMPLATING its own demise, Student Legislature Wednesday let go a double-barrelled shot at the Student Affairs Study Committee, now considering a com- plete revamping of campus student govern- ment. Feeling that the committee had "ex- panded its scope" from the original Stu- dent Affairs Committee study, the Legis- lators very justifiably thought students should have some say-so in any plan for future student government arising from' the study group. However, coming in the wake of President Harlan H. Hatcher's encouragement to the group's work, the two SL motions may place a giant roadblock in the committee's pro- gress report. First of the Legislature actions calls for a student vote on any reorganization plan before it goes into effect and the second asks for further student voting representa- tion on the study committee. Only one student currently sits on the eight-member group although two ex-stu- dent members of the SAC are represented. The other five members were drawn from the faculty. Since the committee has suggested only the very skeletal outline for a proposed Student Executive Committee holding powers now carried by SAC and SL, the Legislature's recommendations can very possibly act as a hindrance to the study group's progress. None of the details concerning jurisdiction or composition of the SEC have as yet been ironed out. Therefore study group chair- man Prof. Lionel H. Laing feels strongly that the SL actions constitute distrust in the committee just when it is getting down to the essentials of reorganization. With reason, Prof. Laing expressed sur- prise when he attehded Wednesday's SL session and found the recommendations en- dorsed before the study group had been informed of the motions. It seems probable that no plan of reor- ganization would go into effect anyway without some sort of favorabl estudent re- action. Suggestion of a campus vote re- garding any study committee recommenda- tions to President Hatcher was already scheduled to be brought before yesterday's meeting of the group. But, perhaps the biggest blunder ac- complished at Wednesday's meeting con- cerned the practicality of the motions. Granted, students should participate in drawing up their own form of government. The campus should pass judgment on the new governmental body. But it has been proven time and again that recommenda- tions from a committee, chosen by the University President, will hold more water with him and the Regents than any stu- dent-sponsored suggestions. This politi- cal necessity far outweighs Student Leg- islature reasoning. If, as the Legislators explained at their meeting, they desire "real, effective" student government, they must pause, take stock of the repercussions of any move they make, and then act. ,-Becky Conrad DREW PEARSON: Washington Merry-Go-Round WASHINGTON - Driving through the streets of San Juan with Governor Luis Munoz-Marin of Puerto Rico several years ago, I wondered why he purposely cut off all ventilation in his limousine. The weather was sweltering. But the glass windows of the car were closed. Looking more closely', I noticed that the car windows were of glass half an inch thick-bulletproof. I asked no questions and -waited until the car passed outside the narrow, con- gested streets of San Juan to the open countryside. It was only a short time afterward, how- ever, when two Puerto Rican fanatics tried to shoot their way into the White House, and I realized how necessary were the safety precautions taken by the governor of Puerto Rico. For on the same day the two Puerto Rican assassins made an attempt on the life of President Truman, a little band of nationalists also stormed thefront entrance of Forteleza, residence of Governor Munoz, and tried to kill him. Tragic fact about the attempts on Gov- ernor Munoz and the gruesome shooting of five Congressmen this week is that probably no one has done more for Puerto Rico than Governor Munoz or nmore than the last session of Congress which passed the "Com- monwealth of Puerto Rico" bill. Munoz-Marin is the first governor ever elected by the Puerto Rican people. Edu- cated at Georgetown University, he spent most of his youth in the nation's Capital where his father was Puerto Rican dele- gate to Congress. A big, square-jawed man, Munoz-Marin looks like he might have stepped out of a Hollywood Western, but he has done more for the Puerto Rican people in regard to housing, schools, agricultural progress and governmental reform than any man in his- tory. Despite attacks on his life, he is loved by the great mass of the people. REFORMING PUERTO RICO PRIOR TO Munoz-Marin's election, Puer- to Rican governors had always been ap- pointed by the President of the United States, and the governorship was considered a glorified political plum for the politically faithful. For years Puerto Ricans had every reason to complain. They were the political stepchild of the U.S., with no vote, no representation in Congress, and no govern- mental administration except that handed them by the Republican or Democratic na- tional committee. But Munoz-Marin, who had the ear of Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, gradually changed all this. Had he not changed it, the Puerto Rican nationalists might have some excuse for complaint. As it is, their only gripe can be on the ground that the island has been given as much independ- ence as the people wanted. The balloting for the Puerto Rican com- monwealth took place on March 3, 1953, in one of the most unique elections ever seen in the Western Hemisphere. Promptly at 1 o'clock on that day a great calm settled over the island. Business stopped. Automo- biles vanished from the streets. Cane cut- ters left the sugar fields. All of Puerto Rico settled down to vote on the question of whether it should be a commonwealth under the United States or not. The vote for the new constitution was overwhelming. The Nationalists, who want- ed complete independence from the United States, scarcely made a ripple. Apparently they now seek to achieve by terrorism what they could not achieve by the ballot. Under this new commonwealth consti- tution, Puerto Rico becomes somewhat the same relationship to the United States as the commonwealth of Australia to Eng- land. Defense and foreign policy are ad- ministered from Washington. Puerto Rico does not have to pay taxes to support an Army and Navy, and Puerto Ricans are drafted into the U.S. armed services. But the island collects its own taxes, and fixes its own taxes, though subject to the same tariff provisions as the United States. However, this system of American guar- antees and semi-American independence does not, and probably will never, satisfy the fanatical nationalists. WHITE HOUSE LUNCH BACK IN FEBRUARY, 1952, when General Eisenhower was chief of NATO in Paris, he received a letter from 17 Republican Congressmen urging him to run for Presi- dent. The other day the same 17 Congress- men-some of them now ex-'s-were invited to lunch at the White House. During the meal the President passed the letter around to his guests and there was 4 lot of good-natured kidding. When Congressman Thor Tollefson of Washington read the two-year-old mis- sive, he observed: "In this case, it's true that history doesn't change much. We liked Ike then and we are just as strong for him today." The "I Like Ike" campaign slogan worked both ways, the President observed. He said he would never forget the friends who have stuck by him before and since the 1952 campaign and that he hoped his 17 callers would have lunch with him again next year on the anniversary of their letter. He did not, however, suggest continuing the festive occasion beyond that. "You know, I received your letter while still overseas at a time when some Demo- crats also were trying to get me to run for the presidency," Eisenhower recalled, "Well, that just shows that at least .CLetterJ to &editor .. . k Bargaining Power .. . To the Editor: IWAS EXTREMELY distressed Wednesday afternoon to hear one of the SL's newly appointed members say words to the effect of "Why bother running in this elec- tion? The SL will go out of exist- ence in a few months anyway." If this is the attitude held by the campus in general, then I would have to regretfully say that SL ought to die. If the students of this University don't care enough about the SL to raise a murmur when its existence is threatened, there is no reason for the SL mem- bers to labor under the delusion that their work is worthwhile. I only hope that it is realized that when SL dies, potential stu- dent government on campus dies with it, because the students can no longer be presumed to care whether there is a student gov- ernment or not. If we stand by and do nothing to save and strengthen SL, then we will most certainly be handed down from above a structure about which we will have no right to complain, no matter how unrepresentative or impractical it may be. We will have robbed ourselves of all our bar-i gaining power because it will sim- ply be too late to bargain. Every single student whohwould like to see SL changed, who has policies or projects which he would like to see implemented, and even anyone who, in fact, has disagreed with everything SL has ever done, has almost an obligation to run for SL this spring. The SAC Study Committee's conclusions are by no means definite yet, but they will be if, when SL petitioning closes on March 13, there aren't at least 40 candidates for the 22 open posts-with less than 40 we will have lost the right to disagree. -Ruth Rossner * * * Wire Tapping;. To the Editor: R E: Diana Styler's letter. How can one letter be so in- consistent? Our Attorney General may or may not be "seeking the le- gal framework with which to nul- lify our constitutional guarantees."' But if we believe he is, the attack should at least sound reasonable. Therefore, addressing this letter to the one appearing in Tuesday's Daily I would like to mention three items. 1. "Brownell is pressing for bills in Congress to legalize wiretapping to virtually wipe out the 5th amendment protection against self-incrimination." . . . Is it pos- sible for an act of Congress to! over-ride the Constitution? 2. Should we not concern our- selves with the guarantees of the 4th amendment (unreasonable search and seizure) rather than the 5th amendment, when we refer to the bill to legalize wire tapping? But maybe the Supreme Court of the U.S. was confused in 1928 when they handed down the celebrated Olmstead Case. 3. If we take yesterday's letter too seriously, one would then come out with the idea that wire tapping is unconstitutional. Is it not rath- er that section 605 of the Feder- al Communications Act says it :s illegal (thus not admissable as ev- idence in Federal Courts), and not the mandate of the Constitution? If someone disagrees I suggest they read Olmstead vs. U.S. 277US 438,485 Ct.564, which can be found in the law library, Again taking the letter of Miss Styler at face value, don't we real- ize that maybe someone is at- tempting to change the law and not "to wipe out the Fifth amend- ment?" Maybe we agree or dis- agree with the attorney general, but please in the future confine our comments to what he is in fact doing or attempting to do. If one does not like the idea of al-I tering section 605 of FCA, that is one thing, but to condemn it by waving the Bill of Rights is some- thing else. -William Wisner The Dean . . To the Editor:t I WISH to correct two direct quo- tations made in my name in the! Sunday, February 28th issue. At no "And I'd Still Like To See You Become President" i ' 1\ ' r a 'y 1 " ff _.:; ; ,: ) f ... /^"" Y;' . _ d _ A . j V ,/ / v . Y6 y .:?. / ry 1 CJ IE 1KE~ -04r rc~oer, the country around them and could be satisfied by listening to nursery rhymes or fairy tales. His lecture was entilted "Our Inter- nal Security" but instead he watched out for Herbert Brow- nell's security by skirting present day controversy. The slight bit of applause he received was much more than he deserved, and even that should have been jeers. -Herbert Gardner YR Answer .. . To the Editor: I WAS sorry to read in yester- day's Daily of the resignation of George Zuckerman from the ,Executive Board of the Young Re- publican Club of the University of Michigan. In giving his reasons for resign- ing his post, he quoted Owen J. (Pat) Cleary's address to the club out of context. Mr. Cleary's re- DAILYOFFICIAL BULLETIN CURENTQ'/ell A rchitecture Auditorium PHONE CALL FROM A STRANGER B ETTE DAVIS, who appears for about ten minutes in this movie, has to work her enigmatic smile and peculiar voice for all they're worth. The movie simply has nothing more substantial than these tired proper- ties to offer. The producers have strung a random selection of soap opera extracts on a watered-down "Bridge of San Luis Rey" framework. Eisenhower Replies o McCarthy T HE CONSCIENCE of America will clearly discern when we are exercising proper vigilance without being unfair. That con- science is being reflected in the body of the United States Congress. We can be certain that its members will respond to America's convictions and beliefs in this regard. Here I must repeat something that I have stated before. The ultimate responsibility for the conduct of all parts of the Executive Branch of the Government rests with the President of the United States. That respon- sibility cannot be ' delegated to another branch of government .. . Obviously it is the responsibility of the Congress to see to it that its procedures are proper and fair. I, of course, expect the Republican membership of the Congress to assume the primary responsibility in this re- spect, since they are of the majority party and, therefore, control the committees. I regard it as unfortunate when we are diverted from these grave problems-of which one is vigilance against any kind of internal subversion-through disregard of the standards of fair play recognized by the American people. -New York Times "UR MOVIES have survived the depreda- (Continued from Page 2) PERSONNEL INTERvIEWS- WEEK OF MARCH 8 Tuesday, March 9: Carnation co., Los Angeles, will have a representative at the Bureau of Ap- pointments on March 9 to interview June men, Bus. Ad. and LS&A, for training programs in sales, account- ing, production, and management. The interviewer will also be interested in talking with chemistry graduates re- ceiving a BA in June for positions in the company's research center at van Nuys, California. Canada Life Assurance Co. of Jack- son, Mich., will visit the Bureau on March 9 to talk with June and August men graduates in Bus. Ad. or LS&A about positions in insurance sales. Battelle Memorial Institute, in Col- umbus, Ohio, will have an interviewer on the campus on March 9 to see June men graduates with math degrees for research positions. The B. F. Goodrich Co., Akron, Ohio, will be at the Bureau on March 9 to interview June men graduates, Bus. Ad. and LS&A, for the company's Produc- tion Management Training Program. Tues. and Wed., March 9 and 10: National Security Agency in Wash- ington, D.C., will have a representative at the Bureau of Appointments on March 9 and 10 to interview June men and women graduates with either a B.S. or M.S. in Slavic, Germanic, or Asiatic languages, although graduates in the Romance or Classicai languages will be accepted by the interviewer if they express a desire to learn other lan- guages. The Agency repersentative will also interview graduates in math (BS, MS, or PhD) (should be discrete, as op- posed to continuous, variables; more need for probability than for statistics; use combiniatorial topology, matrix al- gebra and finite fields). In addition, the Agency would like to see June graduates in Library Science. The interviewers are also interested in talking with Liberal Arts Majors, par- ticularly those who have an interest in languages, math, statistics, logic, his- tory, or the physical sciences, about positions as Analytic Aides. Wednesday, March 10: Girl Scouts of Americaawill visit the campus on March 10 to talk with June women graduates interested in profes- sional girl scout work in all phases. Connecticut General Life Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn., will have an in- terviewer at the Bureau on March 10 to talk with June men graduates in Bus. Ad. and LS&A about the company's management training programs in ad- ministration and sales. Montgomery Ward, Chicago, Ill., will be on the campus on March 10 to in- terview June men and women graduates, Bus. Ad and LS&A, for positions in merchandising, accounting, adversiting! and operating departments. Students wishing to schedule appoint- ments to see any of the companies listed above may contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Gary Merrill plays a man who is run- ning away from home by airplane. We don't find out until the end why he is running away. By that time it has become eminently clear that the characters and incidents have been carefully selected from the dullest, most threadbare specimens in the annals of melodrama. So it is no sur- prise to find that his wife had confessed, with the proper amount of remorse, to having an affair. On the plane Merrill gets entangled in the fates (to use the picture's own idiom) of three other people: Shelley Winters, Keenan Wynn, and a doctor. The unhappy situations of all three stem from one of two causes: either someone doesn't know all the facts, or they have the wrong degree of heartedness. The solutions for each kind of problem, though difficult to attain, are the veiy soul of simplicity. Either one finds out the facts (unequivo- cal), or he changes his heartedness from hard to soft, though occasionally it's the other way around. After the plane crashes, Merrill makes the rounds of the families of his three dead friends. Through a series of flashbacks, we learn about their lives and hard times. We could reasonably expect some relation be- tween these stories, some little ironies or parallels. But the only connection between them is a sort of competitive one: each try- ing to outdo the others in sentimentality and mechanical complexity. As I've already said, Bette Davis is the outstanding attraction. Her virtuoso per- formance is delivered from an invalid bed just like Ethel Barrymore's. Other notable features were the beautifully synchronized violins, which swooped in at the crucial emotional moments, and the camera work, which had all the mobility of Burton Tower. The rest of the picture is uniformly stale, flat and unprofitable. -Bob Holloway All students concerned should report to1 108 Tappan Hall at the scheduled time. Logic Seminar will meet Fri., Mar. 5, at 4 p.m., 411 Mason Hall. Dr. Norman Martin of WRRC will discuss the equiv- alence between computability and re- cursive definability. Potential Theory Seminar will meet on Fri., Mar. 5, at 4 p.m., 3010 Angell Hall. The Department of Biological Chem- istry will hold a seminar in 319 West Medical Building at 10 a.m., on Sat., Mar. 6. The topic for discussion will be "Some Aspects of the Protein-Nucleic Acid Relationship," conducted by Dr. M. Levine. Concerts Composers' Forum, Fri., Mar. 5, 8:30, in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Program will open with Aaron Copland's Piano variations, followed by compositionS by School of Music students Elaine Fried- man, Fred Fox, Gordon Sherwood, Jud- ith Marcus, and Barbara Garvin. The works will be performed by Anita Carl- ton, Ellen Sherman, Bruce Wise, Wil- liam Doppmann, and Ann Pletta, pian- ists; Sophia Fedonis, mezzo-soprano, and Marilyn Eliason, soprano; Barbara Garvin, violin. A discussion period will conclude the program. Open to the general public. Organ Recital. The first in a series of three Sunday afternoon organpro- grams will be played at 4:15, March 7, in Hill Auditorium, by Robert Noeh- ren, University Organist. The all-Bach programs will feature the "Eighteen Great Chorales." and will be open to the general public without charge. The program for the first Sunday is as fol- lows: Prelude and Fugue in C major, Three Chorale Preludes on "Allein Gott in der Hoh' wei Ehr' " (All Glory Be To God on High); Trio-Sonata No. 3 in D minor; Three Chorale Preludes, dAn ,wasserflussen Babylon," "'Nun dan- ket alle Gott," and "Komm, heiliger Geist"; Toccata and Fugue in Dminor. Collegium Musicum under the direc- tion of Hans David, 8:30, Sunday even- ing, Mar. 7, Auditorium A, AngelleHall. The group will present The Six Con- certi Grossi, Op. 3, by G. F. Handel, played from the original parts of Han- Idel's time. The general public will be admitted without charge. Student Recital. Walter Evich, violist, will present a program at 8:30 Monday evening, Mar. 8, in the Rackham As- sembly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree ofI Master of Music. It will include Bach's Concerto in C minor, Mozart's Sonata in C major, Scherzo by M. Vieux; Viola Concerto by Bela Bartok. Mr. Evich is a pupil of Robert Courte, and a mem- ber of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. His recital will be open to the general public. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. Flaherty Photographs, through March 7. Hours are from 9 to 5 on week days, 2 to 5 on Sundays. The public is invited. Events Today Forum on College and University Teaching. Second session. March 5, 3:00- 4:30 p.m., Auditorium C, Angeli Hall. Topic: Ideas About Teaching and Learning Chairman: Howard R. Jones. Profes- sor of Educational Administration sponse to the question of what he thought of McCarthy was to the effects of; "Regardless of what you think of McCarthy and his meth- ods, one must admit his sincerity and his efforts in awakening the American people to the dangers of Communism and in doing so, pointing out the inherent danger to civil liberties through the cur- rent methods of routing out sub- versives." Mr. Zuckerman has done Pat Cleary a great disservice by misquoting him. Mr. Zuckerman implied that the Young Republican Club was a tool of McCarthy. Nothing could be farther from the truth. There is room in the Republican Party for both ardent supporters of the Sen- ator and violent opponents of "Mo- Carthyism"; both sides are well represented in the club as it now stands. The Young Republican Club of the University of Michigan is a firm supporter of free speech and welcomes all Republicans, wheth- er liberal or conservative, to join the club and argue for their opin- ions. The real issue, as set forth by our great president, Dwight D. Ei- senhower, is not "McCarthyism," but the magnificent record of the current administration. We wel- come people like George Zucker- man in the club and urge them to state their case; he has accom- plished nothing by resigning. -Malcom D. Schlusberg President, U. of M. Young Republican Club * f * QuestinOs .. . To the Editor: f')NE of the reasons that made me hope for some action by the Regents on the driving ban mess was the very obvious fact that the Administrationihasn't yet been able to enforce their ruling effec- tively and economincally. But No! Probably it will be admitted by most people that it makes no sense to have a law that is both unpop- ular and unenforceable. Certainly it is undemocratic and distinctly unfair to enforce a law and admin- ister violation penalties at ran- dom. The essence of law should be the equality and unanimity of all before it. Therefore, I should like to pose certain questions to the Regents and to Dr. Hatcher. 1. If the ban is retained will it be effectively enforced? 2. If it is effectively enforced where is the money to support the ban going to come from? 3. If this random haphazard and distinctly unfair system of enforce- ment is to continue, why have a ban? I, and the whole campus and es- pecially the SL would appreciate answers-if there are answers to be given. -Jeff Grossman Turnabout .. . To the Editor: THAT was a very interesting ar- ticle in the "Daily" about men's gripes about women. How- ever, it was just a waste of time and print. It seems to me that Michigan men are getting frus- trated, otherwise there would be no reason for their rather ridicu- lous complaints. They themselves must be lacking something if their peeves are so juvenile, such as the complaints about the coeds being "too smart," "miserable" and "having thick ankles." The men who find so many faults with us girls ought to give themselves the once over-maybe they're not so much to look at or be with! -Sonya Maher Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harry Lunn ........... Managing Editor Eric Vetter................City Editor Virginia Voss.......Editorial Director IMike Wolff........ Associate City Editor SAlice B. SilverAssoc. Editorial Director Diane D. AuWerter.....Associate Editor Helene Simon........Associate Editor Ivan Kaye ........ . ..... . .Sports Editor IPaul Greenberg.... Assoc. Sports Editor Marilyn Campbell.....Women's Editor Kathy Zeisler....Assoc. Women's Editor Chuck Kelsey ......Chief Photographer Business Staff Thomas Treeger......Business Manager William Kaufman Advertising Manager Harlean Hankin, ...Assoc. Business Mgr. William Seiden........ Finance Manager Don Chisholm ......Circulation Manager & ,k 4 4 4 ., _2 { time have I ever stated or even _________ thought of the SAC, on which I sit, PERSONNEL REQUESTS. as "a punitive group." Also it The Treasury Department has a num- would be highly unlikely for any ber of openings in Chicago for Assist- DaofWmnothUnvriyIant National Bank Examiners. Men Dean of Women of the University graduates interested in banking, as a of Michigan to ask the SAC to de- career are invited to apply. cide whether some organization A Professional Organization in Ann were "within the regulations of the Arbor is looking for a young woman! Dean of Women's Office." with typing and shorthand to do office --assWo eOicework. The organization may consider -(Miss) Deborah Bacon j'someone without shorthand if her typ- Dean of Women ing is good. The State of Montana Joint Merit 7o 3 - System has announced a number of, I nternalSecuri. ? employment opportunities available in J_. the Montana Department of Mental ty+ «. . To the Editor: 1 WOULD personally like to con- gratulate Mr. Brownell on his masterful speech. Mr. Brownell Hygiene, Department of Puoic wei- Symposium: V"Obsolete Ideas AboutI Telephone NO 23-24-L SSteBor of Hth an Learning"-William Clark Trow, Profes- employment Compenlsationl Commis-! sor of Educational Psychology sion. The system will welcome inquiries "fNew Ideas About Group Learning"- Member from both Montana students and non- Ronald Lippitt, Program Director. of the ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS resident students. Research Center for Group Dynamics For additional information concern- "New Ideas About Teaching Learned