PAG SIX r° TH 'NUCMCAN ThATCV au.,. Eaa~aal A lli Wa aaTI X T !1 " 7A A WU 7 £ 1 '' 1r FWr W r 'U°r W - W., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 195 4 Bonisteel, Niehuss, Describe Far East Trip By JIM DYGERT . Complete resurrection of Rizal d :x.. ...,....., .... Hall has been but one indication of ... .. .. . .{ ,..,:..:: ::.::.:. the enthusiasm and interest of Philippines in the University's In- stitute of Public Administration at the University of the Philippines. Still a war-torn pile of: wreckage when the University took it over in 1952 to house the Institute, Rizal Hall has been transformed into a modern structure serving students throughout the Far East. Far Eastern Visit Regent Roscoe O. Bonisteel and University Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss, on a trip to the Far East last spring, found the same spirit in all the countries they toured. The Philippines, Hong Kong, Formosa, Okinawa, Japan, and Korea were visited, some for the first time by University rep- resentatives. "What surprised me most was the spirit and vitality of these peo- ple," Niehuss said, referring to the dark pictures of apathy and de- cay often painted by writings about the Far East. "We were really impressed by the eagerness of the Philippinos to get the job done, to establish a good and honest government, and to learn," Niehuss went on to say. Institute Inspection Main purpose of the trip was to inspect the Institute and learn of the attitudes toward it. "We found nothing but admiration and enthu- siasm for the Institute everywhere we wenjt," Niehuss reflected. Many of the countries asked him if the University could initiate a similar project with them. A four-way contract among the University, the Foreign Operations Administration, Bhil CUSA (the Philippine counterpart to FOA), and the University of the Philip- pines provides for the University to operate the Institute in order to help the Philippines ' improve their government by training men and women for administrative po- sitions. The Institute is equipped with classrooms, a library, and a re- search division. The long-range ob- Jective is for the Philippine gov- ernment to take over its support and operation. Japanese Studies Center . A secondary purpose of the sev- en-week trip was to visit the field station of the University's Center for Japanese Studies in Okayama, Japan. We were very impressed with the work done there and the interest of the Japanese people in the Center," Niehuss said while talking about the seven-year-old project supported by Carnegie Foundation funds, Niehuss reported that the Center Sen. Potter Rewarded For Servie BALTIMORE OP)-Awards. for outstanding achievementwere pre- sented by the National Rehabilita- tion Association yesterday to Sen. Charles E. Potter and Dr. Donald A. Covalt of New York. Sen. Potter received the Presi- dent's award for general achieve- mentbased on his long service in behalf of the handicapped. Dr. Covalt, widely known expert in physical medicine, received the W. L. Faulkes Award for techni- cal achievement, named for the founder of the Association. The annual awards were pre- sented at the conference banquet of the Association, which' is a pro- fessional organization of 16,000 workers for the welfare of dis- abled people. Sen. Potter was cited for his work both before and after World War II, in which he lost both legs. Before the war, as a county wel- fare administrator in Michigan, he worked actively toward rehabilita- tion of welfare cases. After the war he became co- ordinator of rehabilitation activi- ties in the Federal Retraining and Reemployment Administration, and since 1949, as a member of both the House and Senate, has continued his interest in rehabili- tation. Protest against recent actions of the Detroit Board of Education has resulted in the formation of The Committee For Educational Free- dom. Formed in the interest of aca- demic freedom by a group of De- troit school teachers, the commit- tee has issued an appeal for funds titled "Educational Freedom or Regimentation, A Report on the Curtailment of Academic Freedom in Detroit Schools." Protect Academic Freedom The Committee has been formed, according to their pamphlet, to defend teachers "against dismissal in violation of the principles of teacher tenure, and to promote an educational campaign against lo- cal attacks on academic freedom." Six points are embodied in the Committee's creed: 1) The only proper grounds for dismissal of a teacher . . . are in- competence, moral turpitude, or convictions of crime. 2) Use of the classroom situa- tion, or any other relation which a teacher may establish with his students, for purposes of indoctri- nation or the presentation of bi- ased propaganda constitutes in- competence. Trial Safeguards 3) Persons who are accused of such crimes . .. against the state should be tried in a court of law with the safeguards of due process. 4) Teachers are entitled to the rights of full citizenship, including protections which the Constitution affords to all. 5) In any hearing on dismissal of a teacher, academic due process should be followed: agreement in advance on procedure, specific statement of charges, right to coun- sel. 6) Substitution of extra-legal methods of trial and punishment, seriously weakens, the system of law and order. Action Cited Asserting that the right of free inquiry and intellectual dissent are "defining elements of the demo- cratic way of life," the Committee claims, "Detroit school adminis- tration is no exception to the cur- rent pattern of repression. Recent actions of the Superintendent and the Board of Education have aroused many troubled citizens to the urgent need for action." The Committee cites the cases of Gerald Harrison and Irving Stein, former Wayne University profes- sors, and Sydney Graber and Har- old Rosen, elementary school teachers, who were dismissed on May 5 for their refusal to testify before the Clardy -Committee, as evidence of the Board's guilt. RENT-A-CAR Standard Rates Include- Gas and oil and Insurance. Phone .LCENEU NO 3-4156 NO 8-9757 Nye Motor Sales Inc. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Detroit Instructors Protest Academic Freedom Violation 4 1% I s is at b5 in le pr RIZAL HALL-BEFORE AND AFTER IT BECAME THE PHILIPPINE HOME OF THE INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION listed among the top two or three University is held throughout the ness in all the countries he vis- quite contrary to what I had hea ttractions as a point of interest Far East and the appreciation for ited. about the Formosans." He stresse y Okayama. its work." Hong Kong Alumni the need for the United States " Not only in the Philippines and He referred to the amazingly In Hong Kong he found an or- make available more education Japan was this attitude preva- large number of University gradi- ganized group of 135 Michigan opportunities" for them. nt, Niehuss said. "We were sur- ates who held influential positions alumni which had been function- ised at the esteem in which the in government, education, and busi- ina for-20 9(1 _ Us vnhtri c~ . - ;. rd ,ed to ral 7ttion r 'GOOD OLD DAYS': Former .Daily Editor Lonie .Describes Past Publications By WALLY EBERHARD Things at The Daily aren't quite what they used to be in the days when Jacob L. Lorie, '96L, was managing editor. For instance, there aren't too many irate football players storm- ing the Student Publications Build- ing. No crowds wait tensely out- side the office for football scores to be announced out the window. And the business manager isn't the only one who gets a few bucks for working on The Daily. Lorie, visiting Ann Arbor for the second time since he left in 1896, is now in semi-retirement from a suc- cessful law career in Kansas City, Mo. Roommate Shapes Career The 82-year-old barrister says he "only spends about four or five hours" a day at the office now. If it hadn't been for the urgings of a roommate, Lorie says he probably would have gone into some form of journalism. The roommate, Leo Butzel, '96L, of Detroit, talked him into going into the "law department" as it the trio left without causing any bloodshed. It was during Lorie's reign as managing editor that The Daily first sent sportswriters to cover major away games. "We'd get the account of thegame over the wire, and shout it out of our second story office window to the students gath- ered below," he said. The Daily editorial offices at that time were condensed in one 1 O 4i Ju . Ibb 11* t il.e 0 WU]wer listed in a published directory con- taining a picture of the Michigan Union. "But this is the first time in the 20 years of our organization that we have been visited by an offi- cial representative of the Univer- sity of Michigan," Niehuss was told. In discussing Formosa, Niehuss expressed a surprise, too, at the spirit there. "My impressions were Cost of Living 'Average .Downr WASHINGTON (P)-Lower mar- ket-basket charges to the house- wife brought the nation's living cost level down three-tenths of 1 per cent in September, the lowest' since last April. The Labor Department's Bureau, of Labor Statistics put out the new figures this week showing consumer costs averaging 114.7 per cent of the 1947-49 average. The figure was slightly higher than the year's low of 114.6 per cent last April, but was below August's 115 per cent. A substantial drop in food costs, partly seasonal, was mainly re- sponsible for the September de- cline. Fresh fruits and vegetables, coffee, and eggs were down. Milk, Prof. Burton L. Baker and Prof. Gerald D. Abrams of the medical school have done research dem- onstrating the significance of hor- mones in the growth of the or- ganism. Reporting to the International Symposium on Growth Hormones at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit today, the professors will discuss observations of animals from whom the pituitary gland had been removed. . The scientists have discovered that by removing the pituitary glandtfrom an experimental ani- mal, the size of stomach glands was reduced and secretions vital to digestion were diminished. An operation of this type also decreases the size of the salivary glands which are additional con- tributors to the digestive process. However, it has been observed that when the animals are given injections of growth hormones1 they resume their ability to grow,I even if the pituitary gland is re- moved.I The scientists have found that3 Gland Removal Demonstrates Vital Importance of Hormones ll ix - .- Ii 1 the key to the complicated gland- ular process is in the growth power of hormones which are so potent that, if given in unrestricted doses, they can produce stomach ulcers. Hormones are so essential to the digestive process that without them food would not be digested and distributed throughout the body. Spanish-English Talks Scheduled Prof. Juan Corominas of the University of Chicago Spanish de- partment will deliver two lectures today under the auspices of the Romance Language department. "Semantica reveladora: el voc- abulario hispano-americano y el caracter nacional," will be Prof. Corominas' topic. The lecture will be given at 4 p.m. in Auditorium C, Angell Hall in Spanish. The lecture will be repeated in English at 7 p.m. in the East Con- Terence Room, Rackham Bldg. THE ANN ARBOR ART ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCES THE FIRST IN ITS SERIES: FESTIVAL OF FILMS ON MODERN ART POST-IMPRESSIONIST PAINTERS 4 FILMS ii 4! i I { ' 'I ' ' t } I i. f should be followed: agreement in * VINCENT VAN GOGH " PAUL GAUGUIN -f * TOULOUSE-LAUTREC * RENOIR TO PICASSO 1~ RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER October 28 THURSDAY 8 P.M. PUBLIC WELCOME NO ADMISSION CHARGE Center Plans. Political Talk 1 r t t i. .. ,. , _ . a ference Room, Rackham Bldg. GET MUCH OR FLAVO Prof. Joseph E. Kallenbach of was then called. Lorie has not seen.oranges, rents, fuel, medical and the political science department Butzel since he graduated from 4 V personal care, and house furn- will lead an informal discussion of Law School in 1896, and he hopes ishings were a bit higher. the issues of the forthcoming na- to meet him again-it's the main The September index figure of tional Congressional and State elec- reason for his trip.--Daily-Dica caskil 114.7 per cent means that items tions at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the In- Lorie, gray but alert and precise JACOB LORIE, '96L costing $1 in the 1947-49 era cost ternational Center. of speech, told how he once wrote small room above the local paper, $1.147 last month. Students interested in observing an editorial chastising a football where The Daily was also printed, From April's low mark, the in- election procedures during Tues- player for being a bit overzealous according to Lore. dex rose in May, June and July day's election may contact the Ac- on the second-string practice squad. tivities Office at the International "He came up to our office the Loie also was a founder of one but declined in August and again Center for reservations. Students next night with a couple of giant of the first humor magazines on in September. will tour the polls, observe voting friends, all set to work me over a campus, a bi-monthly titled "The anc counting of ballots, watch re- bit. But I told him it'd be his last Wrinkle." In addition, he worked HistoricalSociet turns come in at City Hall and at- day in college if they did." on a literary magazie called The tend open houses at party head- Bluff Works Inlander." Honors Am Larch quarters. It was a bluff, but it worked, and But for all his efforts, Lorie and In honor of Turkish Independ- his compatriots received only Professor Emeritus Amil Lorch ence Week, the Turkish Club will whatever psychic income there is of the architecture school was hon- Sponsor the weeklyInternationalklhCe et Sale in. seeing one's work in print. Only ored for "outstanding individual Tea from 4:30 to 6 p.m. tomorrow the business manager got paid: service" at the closing meeting of at Rackham Assembly Hallp t r esults in Penalty anything above operating expenses the Michigan Historical Society. Other activities planned by the went in his pocket. At the same meeting, F. Clever International Students Association Three illegal ticket sellers from Bald of Ann Arbor was elected and the International Center in Cleveland, Ohio, were fined yester- Hackett To Speak president of the society, to succeed clude a movie and lecture by a day by Municipal Judge Francis Mrs. Curran P. Boyer of Detroit. representative of the Argus Cam- L. O'brien. Before NAACP Awards went to five Michigan era Company on "Fine Cameras The peddlers, Morris Wollner, newspapers' for "outstanding con- and How they Are Made" in addi- Howard M. Roskoph and Victor At a meeting of the National tributions in the promotion and tion to movies on Greece. Pomerantz, admitted peddling foot- Association for the Advancement of encouragement of the cause of lo- The lecture is scheduled for 8 ball tickets in an illegal manner Colored People, Willie Hackett, '56, cal history." The Detroit News, p.m. tomorrow at the International below the set price. Besides being will speak on "I Am Free" and Saginaw News, Kalamazoo Ga- Center and the movies on Greece fined $20 and costs, the three were its relation to the NAACP at 7:30 zette, Grand Rapids Herald and will be shown at 7:30 p.m. -Sunday given alternate 10-day jail sen- p.m. tomorrow in the Union. Ironwood Globe were newspapers in the Center. tences. 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