WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17,1957 THE MICHIGAN IDAnV irb A 04 vow V"""M *Z.#' 4Psychology Professor Finds Students Challen5 JfJI*L IH je, Stimulate I U., "I A XT 1c, 1v ID A 0 LV 13 { FRESH AIR ENTHUSIASTS-Youngsters at the University Fresh Air Camp enjoy such facilities as a lake for waterfront programs, overnight trips and cookouts in the surrounding camp area. They also participate in sports and construction activities.. Junior IFC, Panhel, Initiates, Pledges, Join in Cleaning Up Fresh Air Camp By DIANE FRASER "Teaching is a psychic hairbrush -a stimulant when good students keep an instructor on his toes," Professor Max L. Hutt, of the psy- chology department remarked as he reached for one of the many pipes lining his desk. Holding a lighted match overl the bowl of the pipe, Professor Hutt continued, "I enjoy teaching very much but my personal reason is rather a selfish one. Challenges from students help to improve my own conceptualizations." Professor Hutt flews teaching as a broad avenue to helping people as one teaches people xother than just a , ubject. Instructor in Psychology He is instructing in Psychology 142, the Deviant Individual, and inI the graduate crurses Counseling and Psychotherapy and Advanced Psychopathology. Partially sponsored by a Rack- ham Fund grant, the psychology professor is doing research on the problems of identification - the way an individual learns person- ality characteristics from the people around him. By focusing on psychotherapy, Professor Hutt views rapid shifts in habitual responses as the pa- tient learns new methods of adap- tation. These changes that occur rapidly during therapy are believed to be synomonous with the slower changes in life. Feels Area is Unexplored "I regard this as an important and relatively unexplored area of psychology since it deals with both conscious and unconscious factors in learning," he continued, leaning back in his chair. "This is a basic problem as the individual learns to behave in a certain way without knowing or consciously desiring it." Profesor Hutt is in the process of analyzing data obtained from group therapy with high school students and adults from Ann Ar- bor. Data were also obtained from patients at Northville State Psy- chiatric Hospital and the Veterans theory and research that will be useful in understanding this rapid- ly changing field. Becoming interested in psychol- ogy as an undergraduate at the City College of New York because he wanted to learn something about himself as well as other people, the professor took graduate work in clinical psychology at Co- lumbia University. "I was strongly motivated to learn why people behaved as they did and how to help them," he re- plied. "I was concerned about how some people developed 'abnormal behavior and others failed to do so under similar circumstances." Professor Hutt came to the Uni- versity in 1947 after serving as chief of the Clinical Psychology branch in the Surgeon General's office of the U.S. Army. Set up Group Therapy To meet an emergency situation of boatloads of neuropsychiatric casualties during the war, Profes- sor Hutt set up three types of group therapy. With his staff, he prepared a set of memoranda on the philosophy and techniques of this group therapy. The Surgeon General adopted and incorporated these as the first published complete medical bulle- tin on group therapy in the U.S. Army. "The major part of my time now is spent in teaching and research, but I also have a limited private practice," Professor Hutt confes- sed. "I feel that private practice has a great value in teaching and in developing hunches, about be- havior difficulties." He finds a different type of prob- lem in private practice than in hospitals. "Here you see the bor- derline difficulties of people who make some adjustment to life while in hospitals you mainly see people with more serious malad- justments," Professor Hutt re- marked. marked. By SALLY LEASE Junior Inter-fraternity Council and Junior Panhellenic will begin the annual renovation of the Fresh Air Camp during Help Week which is scheduled to be held from Mon- day, April 29 to Saturday, May 4. The joint project will involve cleaning up and repairing the camp. The new initiates and New Members Informed About League Activities The annual League Council Training Discussion was held from 7 to 9 p.m. last night in the Hussey room of the League. This program, offered each year, helps the new League Council members become acquainted with various League functions. First on the agenda was a wel- come, given by Marylen. Siegel, newly elected League president, and Dean of Women Deborah Ba- con. Andrea Snyder, outgoing treas- urer, explained League finances and Maureen Isay, retiring first vice-president and head of Buro- cats, gave a short talk on office procedure. Mrs. Marian Wissenberg, assist- ant social director of the League, trid the newly elected leaders about the history of the League. This was followed by two work- shop discussions. The discussion on "Union Re- lations and Joint Projects" was conducted by Sue Arnold, outgoing League president. Maureen Isay led the discussion on "League and Campus Programs." Included among the topics dis- cussed were the co-ed show, the dances on the social calendar, and the dance classes. Following the training discussion the new officers were formally in- stalled by the retiring president, Miss Arnold. pledges will be aiding a good cause and gain enjoyment from working together on the common project as they prepare the camp for its sum- mer session. Community Contributions Offered Previous to the actual cleaning up work at the camp, money is earned for the camp's support by community contributions. In preceding years, the camp was partly supported by funds raised during a Tag Day sponsored by junior Panhel but now proceeds from Campus Chest are used for the camp's support. Junior Panhel has volunteered to collect money during the Campus Chest drive which will be held Thursday and Friday, May 9 and 10. The contributions collected are ustd for food medical care, craft and camping supplies, camper transportation, and athletic equip- ment. These conltributions are supplemented by funds from Uni- versity institutions and foster homes. Camp Provides Vacation These funds have enabled the establishment and continuance of the Fresh Air Camp. For 37 years, the camp which is 24 miles north- west ul Ann Arbor on Patterson Lake near Pinkney, Michigan, has been a vacation opportunity to children from southeastern Michi- gan. Originally, the camp was mainly intended for the enjoyment of un- derprivileged children. In 1946, when it was placed under the Uni- versity's Institute for Human Ad- justment, its main function be- came sociological in nature. Approximately 250 underprivi- leged and emotionally disturbed boys from institutions and foster homes receive guidance in social living at the camp. Only boys that have demonstrated a basic need for help are admitted to the camp. They are taken from broken homes or are accepted because of delin- quency records. The boys with serious social and emotional problems receive group and individual therapy. They are unaware that they are undergoing treatment, because of the stigma that this knowledge would produce. Good Facilities Offered Facilities for the boys include the use of a lake for waterfront programs, overnight trips through- out the surrounding countryside and cookouts in the camp area. Their daily life is also filled with participation in various sports and construction of numerous crafts. All of these activities give the boys practice in harmonious living. The direction and sociological development of the camp is hand- led by a staff of University pro- fessors, advanced undergraduate students and graduate students. All of the staff work in the fields of psychology, sociology, or educa- tion at the University. Aid is also given by professional social workers, visiting teachers, and religious experts. Women's Senate-There will be a women's Senate meeting at 4' p.m. today in the League. Spring Weekend - The mass meeting 'for those who signed up for the dance committee and others interested in working on this committee will be held at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Union. * * * Hillel-Deadline for petitions for positions on the Administrative Council of B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation is today. Scroll-The senior women's hon- orary for affiliated women recently elected their new officers: Mary Francis Jones, president; Sue Rut- ledge, vice-president; Nancy Mur- phy, secretary; Linda Balling, treasurer; and Mary Klauer, spe- cial projects. -Daily-David Arnold PROFESSOR MAX HUTT Rehabilitation Center at Univer- sity Hospital. At the International Congress of Psychology in Brussels this sum- mer, the professor will present a paper on the theory of identifica- tion using data obtained from this research. Publishing New Text Answering a need for an intro- ductory text on abnormal psychol- ogy that presents a developmental approach to patterns of behavior from infancy to old age, the clini- cal psychologist is publishing a text, "Patterns of Abnormal Be- havior," in May. Robert G. Gibby, chief psycholo- gist at the veterans hospital in Marion, Ind., is co-author. "I hope this will have some in- fluence in changing the empqhasis of a course in abnormal behavior from one primarily for psychology concentrates to a general educa- tional course useful for all adults," he commented. Text Stresses Theory Professor Hutt will use this text next fall in his Deviant Individual course. He feels that it stresses C. t, 'air. '.M y e 1 a'$ =a all ar > a" O" e oo° "o " oo":-- r x ' r a # ! t 6, YrialceeST to d ream-f tbout.-. . youngj and full of fa , evevev. vvv . ~ r +! " S S a 4 a a a a I Slul. e " f 1 " " " .Y C. 0 r S S v * v v & 0S0*1 * 1*0504 There's always a sale at BOB MARSHALL'S A new love interest.. .smooth, glove-i pumps and sandals.'.slender and so feminine ! All the colors fashion decrees in young silhouettes with fanciful details of buckles, buttons and bows. You must see them to belies they're only " .y. . a - ~itL 0 ye 1 " I. -___ _ __ I _ ____ I f l lfi __ _ A m nU rf Dn ~CC'mrTc' r)TT, rnr'A fits* Ir