rAG roue THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, ,TUNE 25, 1951 PAGE FOVl~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, 3LJNE 25, 1954 SOCIAL IMPACT OF ATOM: Experts Ponder Nuclear Problems Research Team Reports Discover of New Virus (Continued from Page 1) Opinion expressed was unani- mous that the dawn of the nuclear age offers challenges and needs adjustments in the fields of edu- cation, military tactics, scientific research, and law to keep pace with the dynamic Twentieth Cen- tury. University President Harlan H. Hatcher lead the afternoon parade of speakers by saying that educa- tion faces a task that will stretch its capacity to the utmost in turn- ing the destructive power of the atom into useful ways. "Must Dissipate Gloom" The tragic facts of this century stimulated the advance of science to a point where scientific power has no. limits, Dr. Hatcher said, adding: "Specifically, it is the obliga- tion of education to move with all the Detroit News, discussed the impact of nuclear energy on mili- tary tactics. Mass killing nuclear weapons will dominate any future major hos- tilities rendering masses of per- sons, whether military 'of civilian, impotent and vulnerable to attack are conclusions reached by the speaker. Weighs Security Measures Military chiefs of staff through- out history have failed to correctly anticipate future tactics because they could not come out from under the spell "of the last war's tac- tics," Marshall said. They have failed to realize military tactics are susceptible to change with the "speed of light." "The fact is this," he continued, "now one low flying plane can do what it took massive buildups of equipment and men days to do previously." Marshall sees the A-bomb as an area weapon with no answer. Lloyd V. Berkner, president of Associated Universities, Inc., crit- ically weighed security measures of the atomic age in an address on the impact of nuclear energy on scientific research. Complete abandonment of tech- nological secrecy in military mat- ters would be foolhardy, Berkner said, but he added that restric- tions on scientific and technical, information have gone too far. "In a democracy, trying to hide a large undertaking under the cloak of security is like trying to hide an elephant under a paper hat." Climate Important The climate of scientific investi- gation is as important as the sci- ence itself, he said. "It is freedom and progress, not restriction, that America finds its power."-. This places the scientist in a particular position because items earmarked for secrecy originate in his mind which places him open for attack and mindful of self- watchfulness of his remarks, Berk- ner said. A satisfactory balance must be found between the scientist's own ideas and secrecy concerning the welfare of the country, he added. This is why clearance of scientists is a delicate question. E. Blythe Stason, dean of the University Law School, made the concluding remarks for the after- noon by confining himself to the legal aspects for peacetime uses of atomic energy. "Engineers and physicists have their atomic problems and they a'e solving them," Dean Stason asserted. "Likewise lawyers will have theirs, and they too will be solved." they, assistant program director for the Survey Research Center, said the threat of atomic war has not destroyed the public's optimis- tic expectancy for the future of atomic energy. The sociologist commented that though most people feel we will be better off for having discovered nuclear energy, the feeling is far from unanimous and relative posi- tive feeling is slight. In his report on extensive opin- ion research carried out at the University, Withey said power of some sort is the major applica- tion in the public's perception. For the public the most import- ant nuclear development is the bomb, he said. Withey's data showed that one in three persons can't name uses of atomic energy other than in bombardment mis- siles, but 99 per cent know of wartime use. Withey added that nearly one third of the population knows a- bout some sort of medical ap- plication of atomic energy, and a majority approve of President Eisenhower's suggestion for an in- ternational pool of atomic skills and material. Theologist Speaks Theologist Elton Trueblood, final speaker of the morning session, called problems solved by scient- ists "almost trivial" when com- pared with the spiritual problem of preventing an atomic war. Trueblood is now on leave from the Earlham College philosophy department to serve as chief of religious information, U.S. Infor- mation Agency. Discussing the impact of nuclear energy on religious thought, True- blood explained, "The ideological struggle is. the major struggle and the one which must be conducted with passionate conviction." The theologist noted the moral problems brought up by the in- vention of atomic weapons should not be divided from the work of the technologists. "There is no division of respon- sibility in a situation which is in- evitably universal," according to Trueblood. He called "an element of tragedy" in atomic development partly responsible for the "obvious burst of religious vitality" in the western world. Neither machines nor devices for controlling machines will provide the final solution to human prob- lems, Trueblood commented. "Cities are nothing apart from the people who make them up," the theologist said, "and we must never let impersonal military re- ports hide from us the fact that it is men and women and babies who feel pain." SAN FRANCISCO (R--Discovery of new viruses apparently causing paralytic disease resembling polio was reported Thursday by a Pitts-' burgh research team. The viruses turned up in a new study which indicates that gamma globulin-GG-really give fairly good protection against polio vi- ruses, or make an attack less se- vere. Dr. William McD. Hammon and Mills College President Will Speak Here Changes in educating today's woman will be reviewed next Tues- day by Prof. Lynn T. White, Jr., president of Mills College in Oak- land, Calif., in the third lecture of the University's summer series, "Woman in the World of Man." Prof. White, the author of "Edu- cating Our Daughters: A Chal- lenge to the Colleges," will speak on "The Changing Cultural Con- text of Women's Education." Also in conjunction with the University's special summer pro- gram will be the third in the qur- rent series, "A Gallery of Women," to be presented at 9:30 p.m. next Friday over WUOM-FM. This broadcast, titled "Land Sharks and Ague," will deal with the experiences of a pioneer wo- man and homemaker in early Mi- chigan, and will be based on Car- oline Kirkland's descriptions of the state's first settlements. Mrs. Kirkland's own account of her experiences as an early sett- ler is currently on display on the main floor of the General Library as part of the exhibit, "Women as Authors." associatet of the University of Pittsburgh made the recheck study on children given either GG or useless gelatin in controlled tests in 1951-52 in Utah, Texas. and Iowa. Some of the children who came down with paralytic disease diag- nosed as polio actually did not have any of the three viruses known to cause human polio, the team told the American Medical Association. Altogether 16 new viruses were isolated from children in the study. Eight of the viruses were not af- fected at all by GG in laboratory tests. GG is a blood product which carries antibodies against the polio viruses. Resembled Polio Some of these viruses produced paralytic disease resembling mild polio, since those children could not be shown to have been made sick by the true polio virus, Dr. Hammon said. Study of the new viruses is con- tinuing. Of those tested so far, none is coxsackie virus, which is known to cause polio-like illness. Dr. Hammon said the recheck, which eliminated cases of sickness not really due to polio virus, shows GG appears more effective than previously thought in guarding against polio-if the shot of GC can be given at the right time. Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at C BARGAIN PRICES', 4 GOTHIC FILM-GOERS ENJOYING COOL COMFORT OF RACKHAM 'QUEENS OF THE SCREEN' Film Society Sets Summer Schedule .3' 1 "Queens of the Screen," some still popular, and some almost for- gotten, are due to reign in Ann Arbor during the Gothic Film So- ciety's summer series, which has been especially selected to tie in with the University's program of "Woman in the World of Man." The film series, which begins next week and is scheduled to run each Monday throughout the ses- sion, is the fourth summer presen- tation of the group. The six films in the series all feature well-known actresses, or plots involving famous feminine characters. Among the stars be- ing featured are Marie Dressler, Anna Magnani, Tallulah Bank- head, Pola Negri, and Mhrlene Dietrich. The fifth film of the ser- ies is a well-known French ver- sion of Joan of Arc. Since the Society holds all their showings in the Rackham Amphi- theater which has an approximate capacity of only 250, it does not sell tickets for each performance singly. Instead, memberships are sold for the entire series, and mem- bership cards are issued which en- title the holder to attend all the showings. According to Bill Wiegand, di- rector of the Society, there may be a limited number of guest tickets available for single performances at a later date, but students wish- ing to attend the series should pur- chase their $2.50 membership be- fore the first showing. a en aFame ne Anne Porter -Daily-Marj Crozier R. J. HANSEN ... Safety, citizens energy and speed to dissipate the dark clouds of gloom and terror that surround nuclear fission as a physical fact and teach young men and women to live with the atom and use it wisely." Dr. Hatcher said that the Uni- versity's Phoenix Project, estab- lished in 1948, serves as a drama- tic demonstration of the impact of the atom on education. Following Dr. Hatcher, S.L.A. Marshall, head editorial writer of CUSTOM H A RSTY L NG for Ladies No Appointments Needed 6 Stylists Air Conditioned THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theater Concert A concert of sonatas for vio- lin and piano will be presented by Emil Raab, assistant profes- sor of violin and chamber mu- sic and Benning Dexter, asso- ciate professor of piano, in Rackham Lecture Hall at 8:30 p.m. Monday. Don't Expect St Warns Katherii Covers Personal Impact Covering the nuclear energy pact on individuals, Stephen Im- Wi- tiY¢'"::".{{:::i',v ~ , a.:;}}{:;; .:":i$:6C:;:;:ij{i:S 3 -,{ r 7v 4}S"'.":e,{:::(";.};:: i::: e'i. e s i} i:}{:r:i<;;:-:,4'?j'lJ{::: l! :r rr>>'Y 5:"?r 3sk6w.s:"f,"sr'Mv'i i i? ,.xatir.{wMS:.S:+:{i::~. :av.+a ."::s:."r.:r."::xv:":.aw:::::.:?:r. f .' t?,'i sk...{ .:.s:.";;s:rS,,.k 1::w:;4., k4<$ii'. r:.Sur":"7b "+s..{ s,f ( O1LI .. Liberty at Maynard y ..2' . Three Named For Awards Three University students have been honored by the economics department for outstanding un- dergraduate work. John C. Baity, '55, and Jon Sobe- loff. '55, Daily editorial director, have been jointly awarded the Sims Senior Honor Scholarship in Economics for the academic year 1954-55. Harry H. Lunn, '54, former Daily managing editor, was awarded the Harold D. Osterweil Prize in Eco- nomics for 1954. The Sims award of $500 will be split between Baity and Sobeloff and the Osterweil prize carries a $50 honorarium. Politics Discussion There will be an irformal dis- cussion on "Politics" from 7:30 to 9 p.m. today at the International. Center. All students are invited to attend. Refreshments will be serv- ed. Demand has far outstripped the supply of qualified city planners. The young writer, for some pe- culiar reason expects to be pub- lished overnight, while young painters do not similarly expect to have a one-man show nor the composer to hear his work played immediately, Katherine Ann Por- ter told the second annual Michi- gan Writers conference at the University yesterday. Miss Porter, a well known short- story writer presently on the Uni- versity faculty, said that "the practice of any art requires long training and sacrifice, and writing is an art." "As Willa Cather once express- ed it, there is nothing wrong with the good, honest work of manu- facturing stories. Manufacturing of reading material is as essential a business as manufacturing cer- eals, say." "Don't Tailor Writing" According to Miss Porter, the test of whether you are a writer is likely to be whether you have a compulsion to write "because you simply must say something." Such work, she continued, should not be "tailored for your friends, your family, your neighborhood, or your editors." "The loose essay or occasional writing of amateurs" is often some of today's best writing, said Miss Porter, because so much other writing is manufactured rather than being the result of an indi- vidual's artistic creation. Warning against "mistaking a taste, a flair for writing" as true artistic nature, Miss Porter re- f;. / . ,. ; _ i minded her audience that many authors whose work is now accept- ed as classical "worked at some- thing else to support a family and also to support their litera- ture in the manner to which it insisted on being accustomed." The first execution in an electric chair was in August, 1890, in Aub- urn prison, New York. .a h /r MEALS for the Summer SPECIAL RATES Phi Rho Sigma 220 N. Ingalls NO 2-5695 f, s + r r; GO SCOTCH WITH JANTZEN SA famous name suits $1800 '..- -CAMPUS- 211 S. State NO 8-9013 -DOWNTOWN- muscSHOPS205 E. Liberty MUSIC SOS2'04 +7 NO 2-0675 for the Finest in Recorded Music FARMER'S PRODUCE MARKET Sales from Farmer Directly to Consumer Open every SATURDAY - 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. DETROIT STREET - between Catherine and Kingsley Make yours Scotch this summer ... with authentic clan tartans woven in England of fine Egyptian cotton and . styled by Jantzen in the U.S.A. Royal and green Malcolm, green and red Victoria, red and black Clooney, or navy and white Hamilton plaids. Sizes 10 to 16. A. Terry and plaid Sea Tartan Cap, 2.95 B. Terry and plaid Tee Shirts . . . 3.95 C. Lined Tartan Knee-Hi Shorts . . 7.95 D. Lined Tartan Tommy Shorts.. 4.95 I 'il breeze-weight for now, fashion-right 12 months out of 12 « The nationally-advertised brand name must be our secret at this price! But everybody knows these wonderful suits. Only this maker makes women s suits of this famous cool and wrinkle- resisting fabric. Only this maker ha' trouble -'I .1 _. p 1-. . yain' rul keepin' Cool? C Qn C/\ A/WV K in- VT~f I i I I ~ '~. - *:~a;;: - I