THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 4, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 4, 1968 I " fit.,... ... ::.. ... i y :-..r f. :':? DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Uprisings costliy at - tJ ~.Nl "Y.Y~.' ':.YY Y. MtN ""V.Y. :: t.Y "~." ""f." ":i".YttttV~.'~:.:Y:: :"51 Y~ Y'" " ' Yf. \ t 441' 1. V 4 t~ > 1n, 1 i . ." .,". .1..t ". '.'::. ...... . ~::::'::;: .'i " " .^.M +?'.. v:1.....}h:.. {''4:+Yx+R .:{:- .n..S^."ki:'i?%:iv...dri:{ti":: ..t": ''"Y.d':" 4 :"dis. i4:i : "'ti" . ' j}t, . L+ y}i'f v v." .o r.. r.'..."... 4 ": 1.. "'.Y :" Y: f :11:: ::: i}}::.e...'.' ~ v %:v:. : rr r '" .{..v n:4' ' 'i +., 4 i . 'i' :i is : 'rt1ti 11Y .. . ... .......... ~.'.: "~t:.41 .. : YYf. . . '. . .. ~" .. :~ . " ~ 1.1:'. 1: """t.,...:':41ry: "i:A .?.., :r, k..?,.?.,. Fn.,f..:. ~,.4 ....... «...,....1ia'v't.{.a n... r...,....... ....... 1... .4 .. b.~ ":' G...i."fr ?.4....n,.,a. F.a '.4.,.. ;}, :'A. i}1f'xd1 w ra4a. }.'4.4: ..,... :4?i'"C1%.ii .................:nk:'".:":'..: X ,... w.: r2:y;.;; ?:,":.. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3528 L.S.&A. Bldg. before 2 p.m of theyday precedingpubli- cation and by 2 pm. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General No- tices may be published a maximum of two times on request; Day Cal- endar items appear only once. Stu- dent organization notices are n o t accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar: "Management of Managers, Pro- gram No. 69": North Campus Commons, A:15 am. to 5:00 p.m. and 7,:00 to 9:00 p.m. Astronomical Colloquium: Dr. R. Jay- anthan, McMath-Hulbert Observatory "The Solar Dynamo," 4:00 p.m., Room 296 Physics-Astronomy. Cinema Guild: Luchino Visconti's La Terra Trema: Architecture Auditorium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. Professional Theatre rPogram: APA Repertory Company in Shakespeare's' Hamlet: Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8:00 p.m. University Players (Department of Speech): Euripides' The Bacchae: Trueblood Theatre, 8:00 p.m. General Notices INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM New Building hours: for the balance of the semester, except for vacation times: Monday - Thursday, 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.; Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.; Saturday (every Saturday, includ-' ing football Saturdays), 8:00 a~m, to 5:;30 l.m. Swimming: Faculty only, Monday - Friday, 11:45 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. General use, Monday - 8hursday, 4:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.; Friday, 4:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.; Saturday, 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 noon, and 2:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Co-Recreation: Friday Nights, 7:30 - 10:00 p.m. Faculty Lockers: Must be renewed by Friday, October 11th or will be re- assigned. Boxing Club: Organizational meeting Monday, October 14th at 7:30 in the Boxing Room. Meets every Monday and Wednesday thereafter. Ice Hockey: All-Campus competition: there Is room for one more entry in the 16 team league. Enter now. Main Gymnasium: will be closed from Friday, October 4 through Tues- day, October 8 for final finishing coat. Will reopen Wednesday, October 9. Broadcasting Service: WUOM Radio (91.7 Mc.) 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. Friday 11 a.m. The Eleventh Hour (re- peated at 7:00 p.m.) Ed Burrows hosts an hour, of news and conversation about the arts and literature, Guests: Mrs. Grant Otis discussing the Jackson Festival of Arts; Sara Germain on the newly-formed Friends of the Museum of Art. Friday 1:00 p.m. From The Mid- way - "Computer Technology: A Poten- tial Threat to Personal Privacy", with U-M Prof. Arthur R. Miller. 9:45 p.m. 1968 Carolina Symposium: Red Clina and The West - Dr. Han Suyin, author of books on Mainland China, includ- ing A Many Splendored Thing, on "Cultural Confrontation". Saturday, 1:15 p.m. Football: U-M vs. Navy, the play-by-play report with Tom Heming- way from Ann Arbor. 5:15 p.m. Jazz Revisited Hazen Schumacher presents Standards. 1967 University of Michigan Biblio- graphy: Forms requesting entries for the University of Michigan Bibliogra- phy were mailed to faculty and staff members in March, 1968. Any Univer- sity employee who has publications to report for the calendar, year 1967 and who has not received the form is re- quested to call the ORA Editorial Of- fice, 764-4277, Philosophy Undergraduates: There will be a meeting of all interested phil- osophy undergraduates to discuss the possible activities this year of the undergraduate Philosophy Club, and a Revision of the curriculum, 4:00 p.m., Monday, October 7, Room 1408 Mason Hall. Doctoral Examinations Robert Grant Clason, Education, Dis- sertation: "Number Ideas of Arith- metic Texts of the United States from 1880 (to 1966 with Related Psychological and Mathematical Developments," at 10 a.m., Friday, October 4, in 3223 Angell Hall, Chairman: P. S. Jones, Placement 3200 S.A.B. GENERAL DIVISION Current Position Openings received by General Division by mail or phone, please call 764-7460 for further in- formation: Central Methodist Church, Detroit, Mich. - Organist Director, can give lessons to supplement this full time position. State of Illinois: Examinations for the followin positions, Accountant, Ac- tivity Therapy, Admin. Asst. to Mental Health. Contributions Analyst, In- formational Representative, Insurance Deputy, Personnel Officer, Public Health Educator, Unemployment Claims Deputy, Watershed-River Basin Dev. Advisor. Applications should be sub- mitted before Oct. 5. State of Connecticut: Accounts Ex- aminer, degree and 1 year exper. Psy- chology Assistant, MA in Psych or BA and 6 years exper. Apply before Oct. 9. General Motors Institute, / Flint, Mich. - Masters degree specialization in audio-visual education, know. of use of instructional TV and films. Bell Aerosystems, Buffalo, N. Y.:' Positions in these areas require degrees and usually 5 or more years exper; Electromechanical Systems Engineer- ing, Structural Syst. Engrg, Manufac- work with this agency. If you are in- turing and Manuf. engrg., Research, terested please contact SPS immed- Finance. lately, so we can make arrangements. Utah State Personnel: Academic Re- search and Veterans Certification Of- TEACHER PLACEMENT ficer for Utah Coord. Council of High- Announcing The Boston Teachers er Education, and 6 years professional Examinations scheduled for Dec. 7 work as staff officer in a college or and Dec. 26 - 31. The exams willAbe university. held at Boston Latin School, 78 Ave. State of Oregan: Health Planing Co- Louis Pasteur. ordinator, BA in planning, soc. sd.. For further information, contact the public. ad. or rel. field, and 4 years Placement Services at 3200 S.A.B. 764- exper, some admin. ping, and budget 7459 anal. THE FOLLOWING SCHOOLS HAVE SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE RECORDED TEACHING VACANCIES 212 S.A.B. Lower Level FOR RIGHT NOW Officially open Oct. 1 on through Flint, iMch. (P.S.): 2 early Elem, 2C both semesters. Come in and introduce Later Elem., 1 Elem. art, 1 Science, 31 yourself to thousands of summer jobs Mentally Ret. Elem., 2 Math-Sec., 1 in all sectors of the economy, nation- English-Sec., 1 Soc. Studies, 2 Ind. Arts-C wide. Watch this bulletin for an- Sec., 1 Home Ec.-Sec., 1 Librarian-Sec., nouncements of interviewing, and 2 Ment. Ret.-Sec., 2 Remedial Reading- openings. Sec. Interview Visit: October 3, Wed- Reese, Mich. (P.S,): 1 Elem., neededt nesday. Naval Underwater Weapons Re- in Jan., 1 Physics/Math.-Sec. needed search Company, Rhode Isl. will talk now.C to BS/MS students in Chem, and en- For further information contact theC Igineering fields interested in summer Placement Services at 3200 S.A.B. 764-C rM .G ,M k I I "7A 'T i ' 7459.NG /"% l 1"A K 1 7 T 1 k 1 ENGINEERING PLACEMENT : UK/AN ILA IUN NOTICES Newman Center, 331 Thompson, Sat., Oct. 5th, 9:00 p.m., $.75 English Lang-, uage Folk Festival, "Long Days Journey Into Night." Oct. 4th, 8:30 p.m., XI Annual Poor Richards Folk Festival, still only $.75 free donuts, cider, coffee. Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., Fri- day, Oct. 4th. Traditional Services at 6:00 p.m., Hillel Student Services at 7:15 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 5th, Traditional Services at 9:00 a.m.; Sunday, Oct. 6th, Succah Decorating Party at 1:30 p.m. No Deli House. Baha'i Student Group, Oct. 4th, 8:00 p.m., 520 N. Ashley, "Black People: Op- pressed But Speaking Up; Women: Op- pressed But Reticient." All welcome! Discus'son, planning, call 665-4676 for transportation. SERVICE 128 H, West Engrg. Bldg. Make interview appointment at Room 128 H, West Engrg. Bldg. unless otherwise specified. October 11, 1968: Amoco Chemicals Corp. Asiatic Petroleum Corp. - Royal Dutch/Shell Co. Overseas Foreign Students only. Avco Corp. - Lycoming Div. Bell System University of Chicago - Grad. School of Business} Clark Equipment Co. Corning Glass Works E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. The B. F. Goodrich Co. Harris-Intertype Corp. Keebler Co. Union Carbide Corp. - Linde Div. Vickers Div. of Sperry Rand Corp. U. S. Gov't. San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard Bureau of Reclamation SUBSCRIBE TO THEMICHIGAN DAILY 19 i a t 1 7 1 a 1 1 7 I 4 Columbia University officials* estimaer $300,000 property damiages From Wire Service Reports NEW YORK, N.Y. - Expenses stemming from last spring's stu- dent uprising at Columbia a r e likely to run w e 11 in excess of $300,000, university officials there claim. Columbia Business Manager Josephy P. Nye said the bulk of the money was spent for repairs on buildings and property "van- dalized" during the period of stu- dent occupation in May. Addition- al expenses have gone to cover added guard services and operat- ing funds f o r three committees studying the nature of the revolt. Costs not covered by the $300,- 000 include; permanent expansion of the university police force, $65,000 in wages paid to employees unable to come to work for three days ! during the student occupa- tion, and lost teaching and man- agement time of university of fi- cials unable to get to work. University officials have also re- cently agreed to hold a union elec- tion to determine representation for its clerical workers who two days ago staged an all night sit-in at the comptroller's office. The demonstration was spawned by an official announcement that the Office and Professional Em- ployes Union International h a d been selected, but the demonstrat- ors favored the Drug and Hospital, Employes Union- The demonstrat- ors charged the University with entering into a "back door agree- ment" with the rival union.' Local members of the Drug and Hospital Employes Union regard- ed the selection as a victory, but claimed that there was no need . for it since they already held ma- jority status. 0 Order Your Daily ow- Phone 764-0558 ' ; Engineering and Science at IBM "The interdisciplinary nvironment keeps you technologically hot' 'Working in data processing today pretty much means you work in a broad spectrum of tech- nologies,"says Nick Donofrio. An Associate Engineer at IBM, Nick is a 1967 graduate in Electrical Engineering. He designs circuits for MOSFET (Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor) technology. "Circuit design used to be a narrow s } ; J* job," he says. "Today it can take you into the front yard of half a dozen different fields. In my job, for example,... I work with systems design engineers, ' . chemists, physicists, metallurgists, and programmers." Nick describes a hypothetical case history: "A systems guy comes to me and says my computer access time is too slow. But I believe myk.. circuits are optimized. Y "So I check the actual device in the r} lab and, let's say, find' that the 9k1 fT-iE curve doesn't peak where it's supposed to. I report this to the physicist',a}4 , who made the device, and he either gives me new data to work with or shows me something I've overlooked." Keeping up The interdiscipliinary environment at IBM helps you keep up to date technologically. As Nick puts it, "You're constantly exposed to what's happening in other fields." IBM needs technical graduates to work in research, design and development, manufactur- ing, product test, field engineering, and space and defense proj ects. We also need technical people in programming and marketing. Visit your placement office WO 1 Staionery Sal 1/2 PRICE Gaily decorated boxes of quality notes and stationery in fanciful prints and bright colors, including scented and sheer papers. 50c-$1 Jacobsons GIFT BOU'TIQUE 3 312 South State Street h-> k Sign up at your place- ment office for an inter- view with IBM. Or send a letter or resume tor Irv Pfeiffer, IBM, Dept. C,100 South Wacker Drive, Chicago,' Illinois 60606. ON CAMPUS OCT. 117,18 SALE Mss J's Knit Sportswear 0ri.1200-.304 Pants .......,.. $7 Orig; 10.00 Save on coordinating cosuols of neat Creslon' acrylic knit irt blue and- green. Tops, 7.15 sizes. Pants, 5-15 sizes.. An Equal Opportunity Employer I