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May 14, 1959 - Image 3

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1959-05-14

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kY 14, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

U To Host

Advertising
Conference
An advertising conference will
be held at Rackham Building in
both morning and afternoon to-
day.
The morning session will last
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon with a
lecture every hour. The speakers
are: Charles F. Rosen of W. B.
1 Doner & Co., Detroit, who will
speak on "From Noses to Neuro-
ses," Maxwell Ule of Kenyon &
Eckhardt, Inc., New York, who
will speak on "The Total Market-
ing Concept," and Patrick J. Rob-
inson of Imperial Oil Ltd., Toron-
to, who will speak on "Methodo-
logical Contributions to Advertis-
ing."
W. John Upjohn of the Upjohn
Co., Kalamazoo, will also speak.
In the afternoon, Irving M. Copi
of the University philosophy de-
partment will speak as well as Nor-
man R. F. Maier of the psychol-
ogy department.

DAILYOFFICIAL BULLETIN___
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Clausen Explains Functions
Of Mental Illness Sociology

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of The Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no edi-
torial responsibility. Notices should
be sent in TYPEWRITTEN formi to
Room 3519 Administration Build-
ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding
publication. Notices for Sunday
Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday.
THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1959
VOL. LXIX, NO. 161
General Notices
..Any graduating senior interested in
speaking'at commencement notify Sue
Christiansen, Senior Board representa-
tive, at NO 2-5675 this week.
Students, All Schools and Colleges:
The Office of Registration and Records
urges that all students who have ap-
plied for or expect to apply for work
with either the Summer or Fall 1959
Registration Programs secure approval
of new course elections as soon as the
school or college will allow.
International Center Tea: Thurs.,
May 14, 4:30-6:00 p.m., International
Center.
Astronomy Department Visitors' Night.
Fri., May 15, 8:00 p.m., Rm. 2003 Angell
Hall. After lecture, the Student Ob-

v

r.

ANYONE FOR EVERYTHING?

Fo --,UN
" JAZZ
FESTIVAL
;para Ise j
anoramn
Events)
DIPLOMAT EAST
Modified American Plan

to the DIPLOMAT!
Get in on a tremendous JAZZ
FESTIVAL during July and August
- with Flip "Perdido" Phillips and
the most famous vocalists and
instrumentalists in the jazz world
in one extended, all-out session!
Take part in a new PANORAM'A
OF EVENTS - sports, parties,
activities day and night .. , "go
native" on our 1,000-foot beach
transformed into an authentic
POLYNESIAN VILLAGE ... play
GOLF AND TENNIS FREE at our
Country Club June 1 thru Novem-
ber 15! All this in a 400-acre resort
already famous for endlessly
varied fun - the DIPLOMAT!

servatory on fifth floor of Angell Hall
will be open for inspection and forI
telescopic observations of the MoonI
and Jupiter. Children welcomed, but
must be accompanied by adults. t
Academic Notices
Analysis Seminar: Dr. D. S. Green-
stein, "Stieltjes Integral Representation
of Harmonic and Analytic Functions."_
Thurs., May 14, 3:00 p.m., 3201 Angell
Hall,
Interdepartmental seminar on Ap-
plied Meteorology. Thurs., May 14, 3
p.m., 5500 E. Engrg. Bldg. W. Gale
Biggs, "Auroral Theory."
' , f
Communication Sciences Seminar:
Thurs., May 14, 3:30-5:00 p.m. in 1412
Mason Hall. Dean Wilson, "On Simula-
tion."
Applied Mathematics Seminar: Dr.s
Rudolph Albrecht "On the Conformall
Mappings of Ring Domains," Thurs.,
May 14, 4:00 p.m. rm. 246 W. Engrg.
bldg. Refreshments at 3:30 p.m. rm. 274
W. Engrg. bldig.
Dept. of Near Eastern Studies. Af if
Tannous, Chief, Africa and Middle East,
Analysis Branch U.S. Dept. of Agricul-
ture. "The Critical Role of Agriculturei
In Near East Development," Thurs.,
May 14, 4:15 p.m. Angell Hal, Aud. A.
Center for Japanese Studies, Prof.
Ronald Dore, Dept. of History, Univ. of
British -Columbia, "Decline of Oyabun-I
Kobun Relations in a Japanese Village,"1
May 14, 4:00 p.m., E. Conf. Rm., Rack-.
ham.
Political Science Roundtable meet-I
ing, Thurs., May 14, 8:00 p.m., RackhaI
Assembly Hall. Prof. Lucian W. Pye,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
"Political Theory and Behavioral Sci-1
ence."1
Automatic Programming and Numeri-
cal Analysis Seminar: Mr. Richard H.
Barltels, "An Experiment in Machine]
Learning," Fri., May 15, 4:00 p.m. rm,
3209 Angell Hall.
Doctoral Examination for Ruel Con-
rad Kahler, Business Administration;3
thesis: "Control of Merchandising inI
Food Chains," Thurs., May 14, 5ths
Floor Conf. Rm., School of Bus. Admin.
9:30 a.m. Chairman, E. H. Gault.
Doctoral Examination for Dorothy
Eevlyn Moulton, English and Educa-
tion; thesis: "The Teaching of Litera-
ture in the Senior High School: An His-
torical and Critical Study of Recent
Trends Based Upon an Analysis of Se-s
lected Professional Publications, 1911-s
1955," Thurs., May 14, 2601 Haven Hall,
10:00 a.m. Chairman, W. 0. Rice.
Doctoral Examination for Robert Wil-
son Lide, Physics; thesis: "Gamma-
Gamma Angular Correlation Following
the Decay of Eu-152 and As-77," Thurs.,I
May 14, 2038 Randall Lab. at 1:30 p.m.
Chairman, M. L. Wiedenbeck.!
Doctoral Examination for Wadi Saliba;
Rumman, Civil Engineering; thesis:s
"An Experimental Study of the tresses
in Ring Stiffeners in Long Thin-]
Walled Cylinders Subjected to Bend-
ing," Thurs., May 14, 305 W. Engrg.
Bldg., 2:00 p.m. Chairman, L. C. Maugh.
Doctoral Examination for Feng-hwas
Mah, Economics; thesisi "The Financ-
ing of Public Investment in Commu-1
nist China," Thurs., May 14, 105 Econ-
omics Builing, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman,s
C. F. Remer.-
Doctoral Examination for Ganapati
Parashuram Patil, Mathematics; thesis:s
"Contributions to Estimation in a Classs
of Discrete Distributions," Fri., May 15,
3200 Angell Hall, 2:15 p.m., Chairman,1
C. C. Craig.-
Doctoral Examination for Benjamins
Charles Johnson, Epidemiology: thesis:
"A Sampling Survey Study of Arterial
Blood Pressure Levels in Nassau, New'
Providence, Bahamas, 1958, for Descrip-
tion of Levels of Blood Pressure in a
Population in Relationship to Age, Sex,
Race, and Other Factors." Fri., Mays
15, 3072 School of P.H., 3:00 P.M. Chair-
man, H. J. Dodge.
Doctoral Examination for Lois Mary1
Thierman, Romance Languages & Lit-
eratures: French; thesis: "Saint-Beuve
and Women of the Eighteenth Cen-
tury," Fri., May 15, 3098 Frieze Bldg.,1
3:00 p.m. Co-chairmen, R. J. Niessi
and P. M. Spurlin.
s,

Doctoral :Exandation for Weston
Edward Vivian, Electrical Engineering;
thesis: "Transport of Noise at Micro-
wave Frequencies Through a Space-
Charge-Limited Diode," Fri., May 15,
2201 E. Engrg. Bldg., at 3:00 p.m., Chair-
man Gunaar Hock..
Doctoral Examination for Anthony
Joseph Sisti, Chemistry; thesis: "The
1,3-Rearrangement of o-Aminophenyl-
carbinols," Fri., May 15, 3003 Chem.
Bldg., 3:00. Chairman, R. M. Stiles.
Doctoral Examination for Aris Con-
stantine Spengos, Civil Engineering;
thesis: "An Investigation of Corner
Eddie and Free-Surface Instability,"
Fri., May 15, 122 W. Engrg. Bldg., 3:15
p.m. Co-Chairmen, V. L. Streeter and
C. S. Yih.
Doctoral Examination for Gerald Hugh
Golden, Nuclear Engineering; thesis:
"The Effect of Centrifugal Force on the
Decontamination Factor in the Evapor-
ation of Radioactive Solutions," Fri.,
May 15, 2042 Phoenix Bldg., at 3:30 p.m.
Chairman, L. E. Brownell.
Concerts
Student Recital: Robert Blasch, pian-
ist, Aud. A, Angell Hall, Fri., May 15,
8:30 p.m. in lieu of a thesis for the de-
gree of Master of Music (Music Litera-
ture).
Placement Notices
Bureau, of Appointments, General Di-
vision.
Appointments for interview must be
made by 4 p.m. of the day prior to the
day of the interview.
INTERVIEWS:
Fri., May 15
Dow Corning Corp., Midland, Mich.
Position in Personnal Department. Must
be able to type. Will be working with
the salaried employment group. Will
work on the house organ, may work in-
to office training, will help entertain
wives of new people coming to the
plant, etc. Shorthand is helpful, not
essential.
Tues., May 19
Old Line Llfe Insurance Company, De-
troit, Mich., June, Aug. grads. Men, de-
gree in Liberal Arts or Business Ad-
ministration, between 21-30, married
or engaged, lived in the Detroit area
at least 5 years, for Agent.
Tues., Wed., Thurs., May 19, 20 & 21
Martin B. Segal & Company, Inc.,
New York, N.Y. June, Aug. grads. MEN
& Women with a degree in Liberal Arts
or Business Administration for Train-
ees in every aspect of the business with
ultimate function as an account exe-
cutive in Chicago. Men & Women with
a degree in Mathematics or Social Sci-
ences for Actuarial Staff in New York
City. Men & Women who will be re-
ceiving, a degree in Liberal Arts or
Business Administration in June, 1960
for Staff of Administrative-Department.
PERSONNEL REQUESTS:
U.S. Civil Service Commission. Clos-
ing date for the acceptance of applica-
tions for the position of Claims Exam-
iner, GS-9, $5,985 per year, has been set
as May 26, 1959.
Veterans Admin. Hospital, Ann Arbor,
Mich. Nursing Assistant, GS-2, $3,25
per year. File card 5000AB, stating
Nursing Assistant as the title of exam-
ination. Nursing Assistant is usually a
trainee position in which the trainee
receives specific classroom instructions
and supervised ward practice from pro-
fessional nurses. Age at least 18.
Chicago Civil Service Commission,
Chigao, Ill. Civil Engineer I; Electri-
cal Engineer I; Mechanical Engineer.
Unassembled examinations have been
announced for June 26, 1959. In an un-
assembled examination the candidate
does not take a written test; the score
is based on an evaluation of hi educa-
tion and work experience. If a person
has a degree in the specialty being ex-
amined for, he will receive a passing
score.
Summer Placement Interviews:
Thurs., May 14:
Home Decorators. Mr. Victor Andrew
Will interview.
Ann Arbor YMCA. Mr. Dittman needs
men counselors.
Information on the following may be
found at the Summer Placement Serv-
ice:
Camp Conestoga, Mich. Man for dish-
washing machine operator.
Rockin R Ranch, Suster, Michigan.
Men counselors and a waterfront Di-
rector needed.
(Continued ol Page 4)

By JEAN SPENCER
Prof. John A. Clausen of the
National Institute of Mental
Health yesterday explained the
field of sociology of mental illness
as the study of the effects of the
social environment on the psycho-
logically disturbed person.
Chief of the Laboratory of Socio-
environmental Studies at the
NIMH, Prof. Clausen described the
work of the laboratory as a re-
search program roughly equivalent
to that of a university department
minus the student element.
Notes Perspective
"The perspective from which
the lab views mental illness is that
of the sociological social psycholo-
gist," he said.
Major divisions of the laboratory
program deal with social develop-
ment and family studies and com-
munity and cultural studies, inde-
pendently operating sections whose
collaboration with clinical groups
is completely voluntary, and soci-
ology in therapeutic settings, a
section which attempts to define
significant problems through co-
operation with clinical personnel.
Topics of Concern
In mentioning some of the
topics of concern in sociological
mental health research, Prof.
Clausen listed the distribution and
social correlates of mental illness,
the, social structure of the mental
hospital and the core of socio-
psychological research on person-

ality development, as well as the
relationship of the individual to
his society.
He then discussed some funda-
mental assumptions about mental
illness and its sociology which
were used as a starting point for'
the lab program.
Regardless of whether social
factors enter into its causation,
the social scientist is interested in
mental health because it repre-
sents the disruption of normal
social expectations, he said.

JOHN A. CLAUSEN
...views disorders

If

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includin; double occupancy
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11

CHI . nglish;:
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1

Thinkish translation: When the secre-
tary of this meeting makes notes, he uses
a saxophone. The chairman is the only
guy who can rap his gavel with a syn-
copated beat. The delegates (in Thin*
lish it's hepresentatives!) come from all
schools of jazz: hot, cool, and room tem-
perature. But they're in perfect harmony
on one thing: the honest taste of a Lucky
Strike. Get Luckies yourself. (You'll
trumpet their praises.)

Nothing pretfier. under
the sun! Lanz bares
the back, nips in the
waist, and shapes
the skirt to a new
sweenina ullnatt

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Take a word-substitute, for example. With it, you can make an artificial
hedge (shrubstitute), a washing machine (tubstitute), an English lemonade stand
(pubstitute) and dehydrated food (grubstitute). That's Thinklish-and it's that
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" w a yr f i ./ v 1 f i{ wl { ,I

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