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January 23, 1968 - Image 5

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1968-01-23

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TUESDAY, JANUARY 23,1968

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE FIVE

TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

A. CNAit 1 l I L

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I

DAILY

OFFICIAL

BULLE TI

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The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editor-
tal responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be-
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding
publication and by 2 p.m. Friday
for Saturday and Sunday. General
Notices may be published a maxi-
mum of two times on request; Day
Calendar items appear once only,
Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication. For more
information call 764-9270.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 23
Day Calendar
Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem-
inar - "Management of Managers No.
48": North Campus Commons, 8:15
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
Real Estate Institute I - Morning
Session, Michigan Union, 9:00 a.m. to
ORGAN IZATION
NOTICES
USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN-
NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially
recognized and registered student orga-
nizations only. Forms are available in
room 1011 SAB.
* * *
UM Young Democrats, general mem-
bership meeting, Jan. 23, 8:00 p.m.,
Multipurpose Room UGLI; Speaker:
State Senator Roger Craig, "Con-
science and Politics."
* * *
Communication Sciences L e c t u r e
Series: Prof. Alan Oppenheim, MIT:
"Deconvolution of Speech," Tues., Jan.
23, 4:10, Michigan Union Room 30.
Graduate Assembly, annual election
meeting, Wed., Jan. 24, 7:30 p.m., Fast
Conference Room, (4th floor) Rack-
ham Bldg.
UM Ski Club meeting, tonite at 7:30,
Union (check board across from first
floor elevator for Loom number). Sign-
up for ski nite at Mt. Holly on Jan. 26.
Bach Club meeting, Wed., Jan. 24,
7:30 p in., Guild House, 802 Monroe.
Speaker: Paul Boylan on "Musical
Structure in Some Larger Works of
J. S. Bach." For further information,
call 769-1605.
* * *
Panhellenic open house for Fall sor-
ority pledges, Wed., Jan. '24, 3-5 p.m.
at Phi Sigma Sigma, 1507 Washtenaw.
* * *
UM Scottish Country Dance Society
meeting every Wednesday, 8:00-10:30
p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. Begin-
ners welcome. Instruction .given.
STAMP IT!
IT'S THE RAGE
YOA NAr' REGULAR
4 & PI MODEL
ANY $
3 LINE TEXT
The finest INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL
POCKET RUBBER STAMP. 12" x 2".
Send check or money order. Be
sure to include your Zip Code. No
postage or handling charges. Add
sales tax.
Prompt shipment. Satisfaction Guaranteed
THE MOPP CO.
P. 0. Box 18623 Lenox Square Station
ATLANTA, GA., 30326

12:00 m.; Afternoon Session, Michigan
Union, 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Writer in Residence: Irving Howe.
Office hours: 10:00 a.m.-noon. Lunch-
eon Discussion, Guild House, Noon.
"The American Revolutionary Tradi-
tion," Symposium with Robert Sklar
and Gordon Wood. Aud. A, Angell Hall,
4:10 p.m. Dinner and evening discus-
sion with students of the Residential
College.
School of Music Recital - Wind In-
strument Department Students: School
of Music Recital Hall, 12:30 p.m.
School of Music Recital - Students
of the String Department: School of
Music Recital Hall, 3:45 p.m.
Colloquia in Philosophy - Professor
Herbert Morris, School of Law, UCLA,
"Persons and Punishment," in Aud-
itorium D, Mason Hall, 4:00 p.m. For
further information: Call Mrs. Ann
Desautels, 4-6285.
General Notices
LS&A FRESHMEN & SOPHOMORES
ADVANCE CLASSIFICATION
SPRING-SUMMER TERM,
SPRING HALF TERM,
AND FALL TERM
(No Advance Classification
for Summer Half Term)
In an effort to minimize the time
required to make appointments with
counselors for Advance Classification
and, to help reduce the line involved,
the Freshman-Sophomore Counseling
Office in the College of Literature,
Science and the Arty has instituted
the following procedure for making
these appointments.
Students should make appointments
according to their assigned counselor
as indicated in the following schedule:
Jan. 22, 23, 24:
Austin
Clark
Ege
Hawk
Michot
Rockaway
Schwarz
Wilson-Physical Therapy
Jan. 25, 26, 29
Arnett-Pre-Business
Clarkson
Cowen
Cressey
Field
Hartsuff-Medical Technology
McKibben
Morris
Nissen
Ullman
Jan. 30, 31, Feb. 1:
Braun
Fabian
Hinchey (on leave-ask for Coun-
selor reassignment)
Hoad-Pre-Business
Leisenring (on leave-replaced by
Prof: Bassett)
Morzenti
Paslick

Smith, C.
Whaley
Appointments are to be made in per-
son at the Freshman-Sophomore Coun-
seling Office, 1213 Angell Hall.
During each of these three day per-
iods, three representatives from the
office will be making appointments for
specified counselors. In order to facil-
itate this procedure it will be neces-
sary to maintain strict adherence to
the above schedule. At the start of
each three day period the full range
of dates for appointments with the
counselors involved will be available.
Those students who do not know
who their assigned counselor is, or
those who wish to see a counselor re-
garding their current elections or re-
lated matters should see the regular
office receptionist.
Winter Term Fees: At least 50% is
due and payable on or before January
31, 1968.
Non-payment of at least 50% by Jan-
uary 31, will result in the assessment
of a delinquent penalty of $5.00.
Payments may be made in person or
mailed to The Cashier's Office, 1015
Administration Bldg., before 4:30 p.m.,
Wed., Jan. 31, 1968.
MAIL EARLY.
Mail payments postmarked after due
date, January 31, 1968, are late and
subject to penalty.
Identify mail payments as tuition
and show complete ten-digit student
number and name.
Foreign Student Tuition Scholar-
ships: Application forms are now
available at the front desk of the In-
ternational Center for: Spring-Summer
Term, 1968; Fall Term, 1968; Winter
Term, 1969. The deadline for receipt of
the applications will be February 15,
1968. All applicants must arrange per-
sonal interviews before the deadline
date. All applicants must have already
completed at least one full semester at
The University of Michigan in the
school or college in which they are
currently enrolled. Canadian citizens
and immigrants to the United States
are not eligible to apply for these par-
ticular scholarships.
Foreign Visitors
The following foreign visitors can be
reached through the Foreign Visitor
Programs Office, 764-2148.
Miss Elsa Fanchez Dela Vega, Teach-
er, Mexico, Jan. 22-Feb. 14, 1968.
Professor and Mrs. Nikglai Todorov,
Director, Institute of Balkan Studies,
Sofia, Bulgaria, Jan. 28-31, 1968.
Mr. Toparo Okada, Professor, School
of Social Work, Shikoku Gaquin Col-
lege, Japan, Jan. 29-Feb. 2, 1968.
SGC
The approval of the following stu-
dent sponsored events becomes effec-
tive after the publication of this no-
tice. All publicity for these events

must be withheld until the approval
has become effectiv e.
Approval request form. for student
sponsored events are available in
Rooms 1001 and 1546 of the Student
Activities Building.
Campus Crusade for Christ-College
Life, 1-19-68, 7:30 p.m. - Delta Sig-
ma Delta.
Alpha Gamma Delta and Panhellen-
ic Association - Open-Open (Band
Open House) Jan. 20,-2-5 p.m., 1332
Hill St.
Doctoral
Examinations
Doctoral Examination for: George
Elliott Mills, Education, Thesis: "The
Relationship of the High School In-
structional Program to University Aca-
demic Achievement and Other Univer-
sity Behavioral Patterns for Graduates
of Selected High Schools Attending
the University of Michigan," on Tues.,
Jan. 23 at 9:30 a.m. in Room 3206
U.H.S., Chairman: L. W. Anderson.
Doctoral Examination for: Jonathan
Conrad Pumplin, Physics Thesis: "Dif-
fraction Scattering of Composite Par-
ticles," on Tues., Jan. 23 at 10 a.m. in
Room 618 Physics-Astronomy. Chair-
man: M. H. Ross.

IN
Placement
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
New York State Department of Civil
Service will interview at Bureau of
Appointments on Wednesday, Jan. 24,
for New York State Public Administra-
tion Internship Program. Applicants
must have completed all course work
for Masters in Pubi. Adm., Govnt.,
Poli. Sol., or Publ. Affairs; or all
course work for MA in a field in-
cluding or supplemented by at least
18 undergrad or grad credit in courses
appropriate to govn't. administration
such as poli. econ., publ., finance,
comp. govnt., or LLB/JD from recog-
nized law school. This interview is
45 min. in length, no additional exam-
ination is required. Make your ap-
pointment immediately, please.
ENGINEERING PLACEMENT SERVICE
128-H, West Engrg. Bldg.
Make Interview Appointments at
Room 128-H, West Engrg. Bldg. un-
less otherwise specified.
VISTA representatives are in Room
3524 S.A.B. No appts. neces. for in-
formation and questions. Showing
movie, "While I Run This Race," 4:00
p.m., Tues., .Wed., and Thurs., Oran.
23-25, in Room 231, Angeli Hall. Speak-
ers are available for interested campus
(Continued on Page 6)

ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES
for Seniors and Graduates in

MECHANICAL, AERONAUTICAL,
ELECTRICAL, CHEMICAL,
CIVIL, MARINE,
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING,
PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY,
METALLURGY, CERAMICS,
MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS,
COMIUTER SCIENCE,
ENGINEERING SCIENCE,
ENGINEERING MECHANICS

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

I

THURS. & FRL, JAN. 2 & 26
Appointments should be made
in advance through your
College Placement Office

"ARABS or ISRAELIS ?
A DILEMMA IN THE
AMERICAN LEFT"
A DEBATE SPONSORED BY THE
ORGANIZATION OF ARAB STUDENTS
DAVID GUTMANN LARRY HOCHMAN
Assoc. Prof. Psychology, U of M Assoc. Prof. Physics, E.M.U.
Moderator: KAMAL IBRACH I
UN ION BALLROOM, 7:30 P.M., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 24

Pratt& U
W hiitn~ey DIVISION OF UNITED ARCRAFT CORR
Aircraft (
An Equal Opportunity Employer
SPECIALISTS IN POWER... POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS.
CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, "'SSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.

+

Use Daily Classifieds

+

PILOT PROGRAM
presents
Rev. Albert Cleage
speaking on
"BLACK POWER
and
URBAN UNREST"
All Welcome
Wed., Jan. 24, 8:30 P.M.
Lydia Mendelssohn Aud.

J

FAST READING IS NOT DIFFICULT TO LEARN

SEE HOW EASILY YOU CAN:
-save hours, use your time more efficiently
-learn to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now
-improve your comprehension and increase your
enjoyment of reading material
Bring a book to a live demonstration of the
reading skills which will be taught in a
GUARANTEED course offered this semester.

'
,t q b
.°- . :j
: ~a
a
t
N,
-' _ _ j

Last demonstrations this week, Tues. and Thurs., Jan. 23 & 25
7:30 P.M. at Bell Tower Inn, 300 S. Thayer St., across from Burton Tower.

ART BUCHWALI

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III

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