SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1956' T IG DAILY PAGZ TEMEN SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Au arments To Open in Full NORTHWOOD-Apartments for married students now being constructed on North Campus. They will open in the Fall. Northwood Area To Add 35 Sections Housing group 2, to be com- pleted by Fall, will add 296 Uni- versity apartments for married couples on North Campus. Constructed of brick and cin- derblock and furnished by the University one-bedroom apart- ments will rent for $85 a month and the two-bedroom apartments will rent for $100 a month. Rent includes all utilities. The first housing group of 100 apartments was finished last Fall and is now occupied by University students. Laundry Facilities Provided Each group of buildings will have a parking lot and utility building conveniently located. The utility buildings will include automatic washers and dryers and lockers for storage by the tenants. Heating, electricity and water facilities will also be centered in these buildings. Equipment for burning rubbish and trash will also be located just outside these buildings. A University bus service between North Campus and the main cam- pus runs on the half-hour, and a post office with, mail boxes for each apartment is provided for the convenience of the residents. Total construction cost of the new apartments is approximately $3,500,000. Another group of 325 more apartments will be built aft- er these are finished. In Scenic Location Located in a scenic spot on slop- ing hills amidst evergreens, the development area will be land- scaped this Fall after sidewalks and roads are completed. One-bedroom apartments in- clude a living-room, kitchenette, bedroom and bath. A built-in broom closet is located in the kitchenette off the living room and built-in wardrobes and a linen closet line one wall of the bed- room. Living-room and bathroom walls are painted white and the bedroom is pale yellow with char- coal grey doors. The bathroom is tiled with grey tiles. Two-bedroom apartments are two floors high with living-room and kitchenette on the ground floor and the bedrooms and bath on the second floor. One closetis on the first floor and closets are in each bedroom. ONE-BEDROOM UNIT ... view from second floor DAILY PHOTO FEATU RE Story By MARY ANN THOMAS Pictures By DON WATKINS UNESCO To Sponsor Meet Here A UNESCO sponsored seminar, to develop a project in the field of Asian-Western Cultural Relations, will be held at the University Mon- day and Tuesday. The seminar will formulatea proposal to be presented to the Ninth Session of the General Con- fernce of UNESCO, which will meet in New Delhi on Novembr 5, 1956. Under Project Director John W. Hall, acting director of University Center of Japanese Studies, the seminar will consider certain pro- posed activities which UNESCO might undertake in cooperation with Member States to foster "mu- tual appreciation of Eastern and Western cultural values." One of the main questions facing the seminar will be to decide what principal areas of culture should be stressed in such a project. These areas include religion and philiso- phy, literature and art, politics, social and economic organization, and technology. Among those to take part in the seminar will be the president of the Asia Foundation, members of the United States National Com- mission for UNESCO, the head of the East Asian Institute at Columbia University, the director of the Foundation for Research on Human Behavior, and a repre- sentative from the Foreign Service Institute. Faculty members from the Uni- versity, Cornell University, Yale University, Michigan State Univer- sity, and the University of Chicago will also be present. NMC Woods Provide Music INTERLOCHEN, Mich. - On the shores of lakes Wahbekaness and Wahbekanetta near this small northwestern Michigan community some 2000 talented young musi- cians are getting the musical ex- perience of their lives this sum- mer. Drawn from almost every town and city in Michigan with a high school musical program, and from almost every state in the union, the group is making these north woods ring with the sound of music. They are taking part in the program of the National Music Camp, begun 28 years ago by the camp's president, Joseph E. Maddy, professor of music at the Univer- sity. For students the daily round of five hours in active participation in arts activities and one or two hours listening to others who are performing is a long haul-but they like it. The interviewer engages him in conversation about things ordinaryj in his everyday life. Never during the eight hours or so it takes to ask him some 550 questions is there any hint at what the inter- viewer is really after-the man's speech habits. "People are sensitive about their language," says Prof. Albert H. Marckwardt of the Department of English, director of the American Dialect Study in the North Central States, which include Michigan. "If you ask a man what he calls a pail, he'll say, 'I call it a pail just like everyone else." And ten minutes later he'll call it a bucket.", So, he explains, the interviewers stick to indirect questioning. A middle-aged person in the same community is also inter- viewed. The results obtained from him are found as the second of two strange-looking words on the dialect map for that area. The first is the language habit of the{ older person. If there is a third, it is that of a younger person. Prof. Marckwardt reports there are more differences among the older persons, as the younger sub- jects tend to be more educated and cosmopolitan. Reading one of these dialect maps may be difficult for the uni- nitiated layman before he learns the meanings of phonetic symbols; for the words on the map are in phonetic transcription. There are separate maps for each word known to differ regionally. Such an atlas is primarily of interest to historians and students of language and folk lore, al- though it has also been used as primary source material in com- piling a dictionary. Prof. Marck- wardt believes there is more in- formation in it than is actually used. Psychologists and English teachers would find it valuable, he thinks. Thirty-Five Years But it's no easy job to survey the country for all its language differ- ences. Prof. Marckwardt estimates another ten years will be necessary to complete the study, making a total of 35 years. Linguists have been talking about a systematic study of American dialects for some 70 years, according to Prof. Marck- wardt. But nothing concrete was done until 25 years ago when the Linguistic Society of America and the Modern Language Association passed resolutions calling for such a study. Europeans have been sys- tematically studying their dialects since the 1870's he says. Editor of the Linguistic Atlas is Prof. Hans Kurath of the U-M' Department of English. Prof. Kurath also directed research in eastern part of the United States. PML OR BUCKET: Differences in Language Observed for 25 Years Ever get into an argument over the proper way to pronounce "soot" or "route"? It all depends on where you are, and the argument can be settled by referring to a linguistics atlas, a compilation of dialect maps cover- ing the entire United States now being prepared at the University. You might have to wait a while, however, because only maps for New Fngland have been published so far, although the materials have been collected for the Middle Atlantic States. the South Atlantic States, the North Central and the Upper Midwest States. Twenty-five Years Differences in pronunciation, grammar and vocabulary have been gathered by interviewers for the last 25 years. After a community has been selected as representative of the early settlement in a territory, an elderly individual is selected as representative of the community.- Backers Wave, Yell Welcome To Harriman CHICAGO IP) - Gov. Averell Harriman of New York flew into town yesterday and the Democrats gave an honored political tradition a mild workout. The tradition is that a covey of backers should meet each candi- date at airport or railway station. When he steps out, they holler and cheer and wave, thereby prov- ing, of course, that their hero is best fitted to lead this nation. Yesterday Harriman backers were out to welcome their man, and though the demonstration was not much by past standards- no brass bands, for instance - it did keep a tradition alive. Our Man' Shortly before Harriman's plane dropped down, a stage director hustled up and surveyed his cast of 50 or 20. Each person had a standard bearing such admoni-. tions as "Win with Harriman" or "Harriman's Our Man." "Hold your banners up," yelled the stage director, "Will you hold your banners up, everybody?" As in a hayloft fire, political spontaneous combustion always is helped along if you sprinkle lib- erally with kerosene. 'Wave, Yell' "Wave, everybody!" said the S. D. "Yell!" Whether or not he was satisfied with this brief workout wasn't clear, because the plane came in then, airline officials hastily rolled out the red carpet they save for these great occasions, and Harri- man stepped out. Banners went up, and the waves and cheers rolled out on schedule. Harriman came down the ramp, answered a few questions routine- ly, and reminded reporters he had a news conference planned soon. "I'm not going to give you any scoops here," he said. And he didn't. Every Hour This demonstration has been gone into in some detail only be- cause it represents such a change from four years ago. In 1952, can- didates at both the Democratic and Republican conventions poured into Chicago every hour on the hour. Each was welcomed with vary- ing degrees of frenzy, some of which was gehuine and some sim- ulated. STAIRWAY ... to second floor ACTIVITY CENTER-Blueprints are the means by which archi- tect and general contractor coordinate project construction. TWO-BEDROOM UNIT ... two floors DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Doctoral Examination for Raymond Jackson Pitts, Educatino; thesis: "An Analysis and Evaluation of Supplemen- tary Teaching Materials Found in Se- lected Secondary School Textbooks," Tues., Aug. 14, 4017 University High School at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, S. E. Dimond. Doctoral Examination for Charles Glenwood Rickard, Pathology; thesis: "Dissociation of Liver Cells", Tues., Aug. 14, 41 West Medical Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, C. V. Weller. Organization Notices Congregational and Disciples Student Guild - 1:15 p.m., Sunday, Aug 12, 1956, Swimming - outing, Guild House, 524 Thompson. Panhellenic announces that regis- tration for fall rushing is now being held at the Undergraduate Office in the Michigan League Monday through Friday between 9:00-12:00 a.m. and 1:30-5:30 p.m. MSU Board Accepts Grants, Gifts Totaling $573,763 EAST LANSING ()-The State Board of Agriculture accepted gifts and grants totaling $573,763 in behalf of Michigan State Uni- versity. The major gift received formal- ly by the board, the MSU govern- ing body, was $125,587 from the National Institute of Health of the U. S. Public Health Service. The amount is for a five-year study of hospital-community re- lations. Engineering Funds were accepted to estab- lish a new scholarship program 4 TILED FLOORS-Worker lays linoleum tile in bedroom. Entire project will cost about $3,500,000. MOTHER'S DELIGHT-Modern, compact bath-rooms and kitchenettes are both attractive and practical. t servmn p~us area. * MAIN OFFICE 101-107 S. Main St. * NICKELS ARCADE 330 S. State Street * NEAR 'ENGINE ARCH' 1108 South University * PACKARD-BROCKMAN 1923 Packard * WHITMORE LAKE 9571 N. Main St. in the College of Engineering, made available by Mrs. Ellen E. Fox, widow of the late William R. Brown of Chicago. Brown, a manufacturer, gradu- ated from MSU in 1903. Half the income from invest- ments with a current value of $182,000 will be made available for $600 engineering scholarships to be awarded on the basis of abil- ity and need. Initially, the board was told, $22,500 will be available for this purpose. The board accepted a 730,000' grant from the U.S. Defense De- partment for production of a tele- vised course in American History, to be serviced to Armed Forces personnel in isolated areas. Tooth Decay A 726,801 grant was given by the National Institute of Health for a study of tooth decay. Among other gifts were 721,000 from The Michigan Bean Shippers Association of Saginaw for bean research, $18,847 from the 4-H Club Foundation of Michigan for salaries of 4-H Club agents to be assigned to Detroit, Flint, Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo and $14,- 100 from the Michigan Heart As- sociation. The Heart Association grant will be for a study of a work simplifi- cation program for housewives with heart trouble. Basic College I -t, cai ESPECIALLY FOR YOU Here are just a few of the servic that you, as a student, will find usef stb. and convenient at Ann Arbor Ban 0 Special Checking Accounts - 2 checks for $2.00. No service fees, es ul nk. 20 no y M1 . ;4