I'I rA'dE rOlM THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. AUGUST 7), 1154 PMfr VO'rlR TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1!)54 CHINESE ECONOMY TO FISH: Graduate Research Granted $92,700 Local Truck Crash Onderdonk Collects Data IMPROVE COOPERATION: I! Home-School Community Research projects on the econ- omy of Communist China, the ability of fish to determine water temperature and the effect of waves on objects of various shapes are among those to be conducted this year at the University under grants from the Horace H. Rack- ham School of Graduate Studies. A total of $92,704 has been al- located for the 51 projects, Dean Ralph A. Sawyer has announced. Twenty-six will be financed by the Rackham Fund and 25 from the Faculty Research Fund. Kelvinator Workers Walk Out of Jobs DETROIT (R-Some 400 employ- As, a skeleton force, walked off their jobs yesterday at the Kelvin- ator plant in Detroit. Officials of Local 9, Mechanics Educational Society of America told American Motors Corporation officials that they had ordered the skeleton crew off their jobs. The strike was apparently over the Kelvinator Division's action to move home freezer and ice cream cabinet production to the Grand Rapids plant. The company an- nounced that decision Friday and said the plant would close down until Aug. '30. Eleven are continuations of previous grants from both sources. Chinese ,Economy Prof. Charles F. Remer, of the economics department heads the survey of Chinese economy. He will explore such phases as trade within the Communist bloc, assistance from Russia, and whe- ther the Chinese can bring about satisfactory- economic development without aid from and relations with non-Communist countries. Information on Chinese econo- my is available from the state de- partment, non-Communist sour- ces in Hong Kong and Taiwan, Japan, Great Britain, Western Europe and other areas, accord- ing to Prof. Remer. Some is al- ready in the University Library. In his research on the temper- ature sense of fish, Prof. John E. Bardach, of the fisheries depart- ment, will first train goldfish to respond to touches of heat. He hopes to find inthe most sensitive areas clues of the mech- anism by which fish detect tem- perature changes in water. Prof. Ernest F. Brater, professor of hydraulic engineering, will uti- lize the facilities of the Lake Hy- draulics Laboratory at Willow Run in his study of water waves strik- ing objects. He feels the results of his re- search will be applicable to the design of conventional civilian and military waterfront structures and will be especially valuable in the design of off-shore structures. On ap ies iw orksho 0 ens onuamp "Home-School-Community Rela- By RONA FRIEDMAN ships" is the title of a summer lege Cooperation Committee of the workshop which began yesterday Michigan Congress of Parents and "Most people don't realize how on campus. Teachers. dark, the dark ages are that we Offered in cooperation with the Workshop meetings will be held ve , commented Francis S. Michigan Congress of Parents and on the third floor of the Michigan Onderdonk, a former professor in Teachers,the workshop Is designed Union, today through Friday, 10- the Architecture School who is to improve leadership in home, 12 a.m. and 1-4 p.m. until Aug. 13. now working for the government school and community relations. The workshop will carry two hours at the tank arsenal in Centerline.sco lan ned e ati or credit. It is. planned especially for credit._____ "We are living in an age of school administrators, teachers, degeneracy," he continued, back- parents and other lay leaders who ences to newspaper clippings on desire to investigate the problems crimes andsuicidesr of school-community cooperation. "Human beings need to have Italso is intended to serve theM eeting Begins some philosophy on life," he as- special interests of leaders active serted. "But the great mass of in programs of parent-teacher as- Third of the University's High people don't have anyone to tell sociatlons. them what life is about.., Audio-Visual Methods Emphasized School Journalism work-shops This was the basic reason why Visiting specialists and resource opened yesterday with higs school Onderdonk has been working on consultants will participate. Spec- publications editors from the a mammoth book entitled "Happi- al emphasis will be placed on the Great Lakes region attending the ness-An Emerging Science" for presentation of audio-visual meth- the past eight yeais which is de- ods. two-week event. ged a sht erswhi hde-Members of the staff will be: Sponsored by the journalism de- signed to answer most of the Charles F. Lehmann, director of partment, the workshops will be "The book aims to get at the the Citizens Committee project of the last in the series of three pre- kernesboktheogettthen the University; and Edith Roach sented to aid editors in keeping kernels of the great truths and Snyder,principal of Webster School, up with the latest newspaper and take off their wrappings of tradi- Pnntiac, and chairman of the ol-b nhieatinn techninues. F t 3 ,,.i1. ,y1 I- 4 DRIVER ESCAPES-A 38-year-old driver of this truck narrowly escaped death over the weekend when his loaded semi-trailer went out of control in Ann Arbor because of broken brakes. The truck hit a car, then snapped off a tree as the driver tried to avoid hitting a road repair crew. The driver, Marion Truman of Mendon, was hospitalized at Univerisity Hospital where doctors said he came out of the accident with only multiple cuts. Construction crews using power equipment freed Truman. or Williams Calls I Special Session Of Legislature Asks Ionia Prisoi 1 Barracks Building LANSING (A)-The State Leg- islature yesterday was called to meet Aug. 18 in a special session to consider an emergency addition to Michigan's prison facilities. Governor G. Mennen Williams, who, rebuffed in an attempt to get the "Little Legislature" to sup- ply the money last week, said he would again ask for a 150-man barracks at Ionia State Reforma- tory. Ii contrast to last week, how- ever, the Governor said he would ask that the dormitory be split into individual cubicles. For this reason, he said, the original esti- mated $225,000 cost will have to, be increased. Authority Squabble Last week, the emergency ap- propriations commission, or "Lit- tle Legislature," contended it did not have authority to release the money. Its leaders urged Governor Williams to call the full Legisla- ture, The Legislators who are mem- bers of the "Little Legislature", also objected to building a dormi-* tory without individual cubicles after hearing Warden Garrett Heyns of the reformatory assert that open type dormitories in- crease sexual perversion. In a formal statement, Gover- nor Williams said: "During the last week, I have carefully weigh- ed the matter, and it is evident that we can not safely wait for the 1955 session of the Legisla- ture to act. We now have more than 9,450 inmates, and by Janu- ary we may have close to 10,000 in a prison system designed to hold safely less than 8,600. No Maximum Set On Judge Salaries LANSING (P-Legislative at- tempts to set a $22,500 maximum salary for circuit judges were nul- lified yesterday by an Attorney General's opinion. Atty. Gen. Frank G. Millard held that the State may not re- duce its share of judges' salaries if the combined State and County salary exceeds the maximum, The 1954 Legislature raised cir- cuit judges' state salaries from $9,000 a year to $12,500 a year. LINGUISTICS LECTURES Four talks remain in the cur- rent series of the University's Lin- guistic Lectures being presented under auspices of the Linguistic Institute. "Linguistic Peculiarities in Skal- dic Poetry" will be discussed atE 7:30 p.m. today in Rackham Am- phitheater by Prof. Konstant:n Reichardt, Yale University pro- fessor of Germanic Languages. At; 12:50 p.m. tomorrow in the Lea- gue Prof. Waldo E. Sweet of the Latin department, will speak on ''Does Latin Grammar Fit Latin?" "Current Research on Bilingual- ism" will be considered at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Rackham Am- phitheater by Prof. Uriel Wein- reich, Columbia University profes- sor of Yiddish Language, Litera- ture and Culture. The current series will be con- cluded with a discussion of "Prob- lems of Linguistic Geography in the Pacific Coast Region" by Prof. I David W. Reed, of the English de- partment at the University of California, Santa Barbara. * * * E 7 t t E t l t __ C E r 1 i el discussion on "The Second Kin- sey Report." Other panel participants will be: Prof. George P. Murdock, chair- man, Yale University anthropology department; and University facul- ty members Prof. N. Edd Miller of the speech department; Prof. Roger W. Heyns of the psychology department; Prof. Douglas N. Morgan, visiting professor of phil- osophy; and Alexander T. M. Wil- son, visiting lecturer in psychol- ogy. * * * OPERA TO OPEN The great masterpiece of com- edy in music, Mozart's opera "The Marriage of Figaro," will open Thursday as the final offering on the 1954 Summer Playbill. This will be the20th consecu- tive summer the School of Music and Department of Speech have combined forces in presenting an opera. The production is scheduled for 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Monday in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theater. Tickets may be purchased at the Mendelssohn Box Office for $1.75, $1.40 and $1. There is a limited number available except, for Mon- day, August 9. Concert Toddy The Stanley Quartet at the University (Prof. Gilbert Ross and Prof. Emil Raab, violinists; Prof. Oliver Edel, cellist; and Prof. Robert Courte, violist) will present the third and last concert in the summer series at 8:30 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Scheduled for performance are two Beethoven quartets- "G major, Op. 18, No. 2" and "B-flat major, Op. 130." Calendar of Events tion to make them as simple as possible," he explained. Mosaic Book Called a mosaic book, it utilizes 1144 different authors' quotes. A mosaic book, Onderdonk explained is one which uses many pertinent quotes that present the truths so beautifully that they could not be expressed in any better way, and yet also contains the author's flow of thoughts. "Man increases his own happi- ness in the same degrees, as he procures it for others," is a state- ment made by Jeemy Bentham, which provides the basis of Onder- donk's book and philosophy. "Studies have shown that the amount of income and happiness have very little relations," Onder- donk pointed out. "The majority of people are un- happy because they are impris- oned in themselves," he continued. The idea that the self is a prison is thousands of years old, he ex- plained. "Selfitus" is a word On- derdonk coined to describe this in his book. To escape themselves, people must find causes, he said. "The important thing," he pointed out, "is not the cause itself, but wheth- er the person himself believes that cause to be worthwhile." "The more 'alive' a person is and the less distorted his perspec- tive is, the happier he will be." People like Gandi and Tostoy were the most alive, he feels. Vegetarian, Tolstoyian A Tolstoyian, Onderdonk is a vegetarian, belives in world peace and Esperanto. While at the Uni- versity he was head of the Tolstoy Leaguerand taught Esperanto. A Brooklynite by birth, Onder- donk went to Vienna as a boy and lived there for about 20 years. He received his degree from the Roy- al and Imperial Institute of Tech- nology in Vienna. The main purpose of the kook is to make people recognize these basic truths. Ultimately he hopes that Hollywood will make short movies that would clearly drama- tize the truths. Comprised of sixty chapters, the book includes many pictures and newspaper stories that illustrates his points. At present Onderdonk is trying to condense the book. Out-and-out elegance for evenings out! I L V11V1WL} Q11L4 4r11W1i 111[411 Vl V11G 4V1^' ' jl11 h1114CL <"1V11 4G1+11111t. ,UG.?. 41 cetm ,.4 ,rr....:;." ..;,fir,; ; .. ' , /.' ;j 1 . ti. .1 /' RUSSIAN STUDIES "Russian Expansion and the Minorities" will be discussed today and Thursday during the last week of the Special Program in RussianI Studies. Prof. Andrei A. Lobanov-Ros- tovsky of the history department, will discuss the subject during two seminars at 3 p.m. today and Thursday in Rm. 407, Mason Hall. At 8 p.m. today, he will also lead a round-table discussion on the topic. The event is scheduled to take place in the West Confer- ence Rm. of the Rackham Bldg. * * * SPEECH ASSEMBLY Prof. Claribel Baird, of theI speech department, will present a program of readings on modern poetry at 3 p.m. tomorrow during the last speech assembly of the Summer Session. Sponsored by the Department of Speech, the assembly will take place in the Rackham Amphithe- ater, In addition to Prof. Baird's pro- gram, graduating students will be cited by members of the depart- ment staff. * * * KINSEY COMMENTARY Dr. Sophia Kleegman, New York gynecologist and Kinsey con- sultant, tomorrow will present the last lecture in the current Sum- mer Session Program, "Woman in the World of Man." ' Dr. Kleegman will speak on the "Influence of Kinsey Data on Sex' Education" at 4:15 p.m. in Audi- torium A, Angell Hall. At 7:45 p.m., she will participate in a pan- WARN ER'S' "Merry Widow" Lovely to look at-even lovelier on you! This fabulous half-bra, Cinch and garter belt. In black or white nylon marquisette and elastics, No. 1311 at $12.50. In white cotton No. 1315 at $10.00, h Ua *Reg. 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