THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 5,1955_ AGEt". FnOURt Al THEMIHIAN ~ALYTUEDA, ULY.,J. YI lt: PROF. HALL TOO: Student-Collected Books Sent to Asia Books collected by the Student Government Council's Asian Book Drive are now on their way to Asia. Totalling more than 4,000, they arrived in San Francisco early last. month and were prepared for shipment by the Asia Foundation office there, according to a letter received by International Center Director James M. Davis from Carlton Lowenberg of the Founda- tion's San Francisco office. } The letter also indicated that Prof. Robert B. Hall of the geogra- phy department and Director of the Center for Japanese Studies, had stopped en route to Tokyo to see the books consigned for Oka- yama University. Tokyo Representative Prof. Hall is now serving as the Asia Foundation representative in Japan, and will handle the distri- bution of the books in Tokyo. Books from the warehouse stock in San Francisco are being used to build or supplement libraries in many parts of Asia, Lowenberg said. Books are being sent to the Research Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences at Seoul and the Philippine-Chinese Lending Library in Manila. The Asian Room of the Univer- sity of Dacca, the Pakistan Acad- emy of Science in Karachi, the Mencius Library in Hong Kong and many others are also receiv- ing books from the Foundation. For Classroom Use In many cases, the Foundation is able to send sufficient copies of a single text for classroom use, enabling certain Asian students to have a book of their own for the first time.. Lowenberg thanked the Inter- national Center for its role in the book drive. He also wrote to Tom Sawyer, '58, who conducted the campus book drive for SGC, to ex- press the Foundation's apprecia- tion for the books. ASIAN BOOK DRIVE-In San Francisco, Prof. Robert B. Hall (right) of the geography department and Director of the Center for Japanese Studies, looks over the books collected by the Uni- versity for the Asia Foundation. e D The Daily went on television last night. In a 20-minute spot on Univer- sity Television's "310 Weekly" pro- gram on WPAG-TV, Daily person- nel explained the operations of their newspaper. The three members of The Dai- ly Editorial Board, Pat Roelofs, Cal Samra and Jim Dygert, told how the paper is managed, edited and written entirely by students with- out censorship by any agent of the University, although it is published under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Taking a typical news story through the steps ordinarily re- quired to get it from its beginning to the front steps of a subscriber, the three elaborated on each step. Beginning with a phone call; the story was assigned to a reporter, completed by a rewrite and edited and placed on the page by a night editor. Each step in this process was explained. At this point, Shop Superintend- ent Ken Chatters took over the narration and explained the work- ings of theaphysical plant from the time the men in shop get the edit- ed story and the time the papers roll off the press. Following the Daily's show, the half-hour program was completed by three presentations on the pi- ano by Gary Johnson and an inter- view with Washtenaw County Sheriff Erwin L. Mager and fire- man John Anderson. aily Goes o1 Television Events Today "ROMANCE in Michigan His- tory" is the title of F. Clever Bald's talk at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. He is Assistant Di- rector of the Michigan Historical Collections, and his talk is part of the Summer Session "Michigan" series. APTANEBEN, the Michigan In- dian Midsummer Festival consist- ing of dances, songs and stories, will be presented outdoors in front of Clements Library at 7:30 p.m. In event of rain, the program will transfer to Auditorium A, An- gell Hall. There is no admission charge. A display of Indian crafts of the Western Great Lakes will be open to the public at the library. At a reception to follow the pro- gram, there will be native music sung by the performers. * * * "STANDARDIZING a L a n - guage: Cases and Conclusion" is the title of a talk to be given by Prof. Uriel Weinriech of the Co- lumbia University linguistics de- partment at 7:30 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater. * * * LANE HALL will sponsor its weekly square dance at 7:30 p.m. Grey Austin will call the dances. All students are invited to the dance. Refreshments will be served. ALERTNESS-University Television studio workers remain con- stantly on the alert to move equipment to where it is needed on a second's notice during the program. FOLLOW-UP-Master of ceremonies Joe Frisinger interviews Washtenaw County Sheriff Erwin L. Klaker (left) and John An- derson of the Ann Arbor Fire Department (right) after The Daily's spot on the program. -r T w V V V V V V~ V W V V V W V~VV VV a - = a a a v a v s a a - a a o ^. caa 7 v "cv c vsc7 ^.acn