Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 12, 1970 Page Six THE MICHiGAN DAILY Thursday, March 12, 1970 GEOLOGY PROF Russell Hussey dies College graduates face precipitous decline, in number of current job openings available "THE FATHER" by August Strindberg Saturday,: March 14 8 p.m. Admission:7 5c at THE HOUSE i 1429 HILL STREET Geology Prof. Russell C. Hussey died March 1. He was 81. Prof. Hussey spent more than 40 years at the University, first as a student and later as a professor specializing in historical geology and vertebrate evolution. He was born at Mendon, Ohio, on Oct. 31, 1888, and earned a bachelor of arts degree at the University in 1911. He spent the next decade as a geological con- sultant in California and Colo- rado. Hussey earned his doctorate in geology in 1924 and rose through the faculty ranks to a full pro.- fessorship. He retired in 1959. Prof. Hussey wrote a textbook on historical geology and was co- author with Prof. Kenneth Landes, of the book "Geology and Man." He also contributed many techni- cal papers on palenontology and stratigraphy to encyclopedias and professional journals. He was past president of the Michigan Basin Geological So- ciety and was a fellow of the Geological Society of America. He was a member of the American Society of Petroleum Geologists and the Society of Vertebrate Paleontologists, as well as Pi Kap- pa Alpha, Gamma Alpha, Sigma Xi, Phi Sigma, and Sigma Gamma Epsilon. Prof. Hussey was also a past president ofthe Ann Arbor Rotary Club. He is survived by his widow, the former Minnie Simmons of Hough- ton, whom he married in 1922. His home was at 595 Riverview. Contributions may be made to the Russell C. Hussey Memorial Fund for Needy Students in Ge- ology which is being established in the department of geology and mineralogy. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S..A B l d g., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturdayaand Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices a r e not accepted for publication. F o r more inforina- tion, phone 764-4270. THURSDAY, MARCH 12 Day Calendar Phiysics Lunch Seminar: M. McClin- tock, U. of Wisconsin, "Physics and So- ciety: Are the Two Compatible?" P&A Colloq. Rm., 12:00 p.m. Piano Dept. Student Recital: School of Music Recital Hall, 12:30 p.m. Nuclear Colloq.: ,. S. Tickle, "Weak Coupling", P&A Colloq. Rm., 4:00 p.m. English Dept. Poetry Reading: Tom Clark, Aud. 1B, Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. By The Associated Press College students who graduate this year are finding that in- dustry has a lot fewer jobs for them than in 1969. The College Placement Coun- cil, which services 1,300 colleges and universities with job infor- mation, said Tuesday a nation- Botany Seminar: Dr. Crispeels, U. of Calif., "Synthesis of Hydroxyproline- Rich Glycoproteins by Plant Cells", 4:15 p.m. Graduat Assembly Mtg.: W. Confer- ence Rm., Rackham, 7:30 p.m. University Players: "Life Is a Dream", Trueblood Theater, 8:00 p.m. The Baroque Trio: N. Hauenstein, flute; F. Mueller, oboe; L. Hurst, dou- ble bass; C. Fisher, harpsichord; w i t h RH. Russell, mezzo soprano, Rackham Hall, 8:00 p.m. Profesional Theater Program: Phil Ford & Mimi Hines "I Do! I Do!" Hill Au.d*, 8:30 p.m. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Further Info, on these programs at Career Planning, 3200 SAB, 764-6338. Loyola Univ., Chicago, offers evening MBA program, applies. for any quarter accepted. UCLA Offers Master of Sci. in Bus. Admin., specialization in arts admin. Apply by April 15 for Fall quarter. Univ. of New Mexico offersfSpecial Scholarship Program in Law for Amer- ican Indians, grants for expenses and allowances for dependents, open to any Amer. Idian having at least 3 years of college. Harvard Univ. offers summer insti- wide survey shows a decline in job offers from industry at the bachelor's degree level of 16 per cent. For those receiving master's degrees there are 26 per cent fewer jobs and at the doctorate level, the drop is 14 per cent, the survey showed. tute in Arts Armin., July 6-31. Apply before May 15. United National Translation Exams, apply by March 16, native proficiency in English, with French strength and similar knowi. of Russian, Span., or Chinese; exam in N.Y. on April 10. Experiment in International Living offers summer programs, independent study prog., taching Eng. as Peace Corps Volunteer; booklet avail. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE Lower Level, 212 SAB Interviews at Summer Placement: MARCH 12: Camp B'lodgett, Mich., Soc. Wk. Cabin couns, spec. In wtrfrnt., arts & crafts, & nature. MARCH 13: Camp Sequoia, N.Y., Coed. Waterfrnt., pioneering, piano and coral, nature, dance photo newspaper, drama, h a m radio, tennis riflery fencing. ORGANIZATION NOTICES The Ageless Science of Yoga, Asanas & Posture Class sponsored by Self Real- ization Fellowship. Mon. or Wed.. 8- 9:00 p.m., callsLinda or.Dale, 761-9825 after 6:00. Hardest hit by the declining job market are those with de- grees in technical fields, the council said. The economic squeeze in the aerospace indus- try alone has caused a reduction of more than 1,200 job offers, it said, and an over-all 24 per cent decrease in all technical O fields. The one bright spot is for ac- counting majors. The Bethle- hem, Pa.-based firm said offers are up 9 per cent for accoun- tants compared to last year and have risen 56 per cent over the last' three years. Salaries for accountants also have grown by about 9 per cent for each of the last three years while in other fields increases in salary have been slow-5.6 per cent since June in technical fields and 7.6 per cent in non- technical jobs, according to the survey of 141 colleges. Indicative of the job squeeze said university placement di- rectors contacted. by The Asso- ciated Press is the heavy stu- dent demand for interviews with job recruiters and the increased selectivity of the recruiters in hiring. Dr. Norman Frisbey, director of placement services at Penn State, said "Our recruiting schedules are overflowing. Stu- dents are aware of what the employment situation is across the country so they're working harder to find jobs they want. "They're making more re- quests for more interviews with more companies and they're making them earlier than usual," he said. Edward Shaw, placement di- rector at the University of Cali- fornia at Los Angeles, said job offers are down 20? per cent "with engineering and science students with master's degrees bearing the brunt of it," "Whereas in the past these students have had perhaps three or four jobs to choose from, now they're getting only one- companies like Boeing and Lock- heed just aren't interviewing as many as before," he said. "After all, their engineers with years of experience are having a tough time with layoffs." At Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., Dr. Frank Endi- cott said, "There appears to be a reluctance to make firm of- fers." He said about 10 per cent of the recruiters had canceled their visits. At the university's Urbana campus, Gerald W. Peck said the number of recruiters con- tacting the placement office has been stable "but I get the im- pression their needs won't be as great." ........... ............. . ... . . =MIX= eac Il on the En ironment FRIDAY, MARCH 13 WORKSHOPS and SYMPOSIA 9:00-Congressional fearing-Union Ballroom 10:00-"Population Action: Where do we go from here?" Physics and Astronomy Aud. 12:00-"Population Crisis: What a physician can do in the community"-North Leciture Hall, Med. ci. i 1:00-"Air Pollution and respiratory pollutants"- M5330 Med. Sci. I 1:00-"The Role of Nuclear Power Production"-3035 E. Engin. 1:30-"The person and the environment"-Vanderbury Room1 Mich. League. 1 30-"World Food Resources"-3RS Union} 1:30-"American Ethic and Ecology"-Canterbury House 1:30-"Crisis in Urban Services"-D & E Room, Mich. League 1:30-"Pesticides and the Farm Workers' Union"-3rd Floor Conference koom, Mich. Union 1 1:30-"Chemical and Biological Warfare"-Union Ballroom 1:30-"'Multi-media Happening-What an indivdual does to destroy hs environment"-Michigan/Room, League 1:30-"Contraceptives--present and future methods"- North Lecture Hall, Med. Sci. 11 1:30-"The Media and the Environment' -Hussey Room, League 2:00-"Water Pollution and Sollution"'-Med. Sch. I, M330 2:00-"The visible environment'"-Union 3KLM 2:00-'"Religion and the environment"-Guild House 2:00-"Towards a Liquid Hydrogen Fuel Economy"- Physics and Astronomy colloq. room 2:00-"Air Pollution"-Union Assembly Hall 3:00-"Population Crisis"-Anderson Room, Union 3:00-"Abortion-medical and legal aspects"-N .Lecture Hall, Med. Sci. 1 3:30-"Adaptation to a polluted environment"-N5330 Med. Sch. I 3:30-"Wilderness Preservation: Formation of a National Seashore" -1040 S.N.R. 4:00-"The use of non-pollutant chemicals in insect control"- 1400 Chem. 1:00 A.M.-"Environmental Poetry"-Canterbury House Med Sch. I FILMS-Multipurpose Room, UGLI 10:00-Wealth of the Waste Land 10:30-A Day at the Dump 11:00-Beyond Conception (X Rated) 12:00-Who Killed Lake Erie? 1:30-Bull dozed America 2:00-By Land, Sea and Air 2:30-The River Must Live 3:00-Multiply. .. and subdue the Earth 4:00-Beyond Conception (X Rated) evening more films ! ! ! / i w d A P MAJ-OR EVENTS 12:00 Noon ECO-RALLY Diag Senator Phillip HART, Dr. Hugh ILTIS, Rock Band N ROOT CAUSES OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS 7:30 P.M.-PIONEER HIGH SCHOOL (Free buses will leave from Union starting at 6:40) ' Morton DARROW-moderator La Mont COLE ecologist Walter REUTHER-UAW Ted DOAN-Dow Chemical Murray BOOKCHIN "Ecology and Revolutionary Thought" Ansley COALE-Population Expert John BARDACH-Human ecology Closing Address SENATOR EDMUND MUSKIE