THE MICHIGAN DAILY Co Appear DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN If Cook Revisited Law Q <. ,:>. o, :i )? u} =i !;'; >; , r:i fj psq < s r i vll ! , l a 1 i The Daily Official Bulletin is an 1 official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- tonial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form 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. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1958 VOL. LXIX, NO. 23' General Notices Blue Cross Group Hospitalization, Medical and Surgical SerThe Programs for staff members will be open from Oct. 6 through Oct. 17 for new applica- tiona and changes in contracts now in effect. Staff members who wish to in- clude surgical and medical *services should make such changes in the Per- sonnel Office, Room 1020, Admin. Bldg. New applications and changes will be effective Dec. 5 with the first pay- roll deduction on Nov. 30. After Oct. 17 no new applications or changes can' be accepted until Oct. 1959. Functional Analysis and Partial Dif- ferential Equations Seminar: First meeting will be Mon., Oct. 13, at 4:00 p.m., 3017 Angell Hall. The speaker will be Prof. E. H. Rothe. Marshall Scholarship Applicants: There will be a meeting, Mon., Oct. 13, 4:00 p.m. Rm. 410, Mason Hall. Placement Notices REGISTRATION The Education and General Division Placement meeting will be held at 4:00 p.m., Tues., Oct. 14, In Aud. A, Angell Hall. Dr. H. G. Ludlow, Director of the Bureau of Appointments, will discuss registration, and opportunities for placement. Registration blanks will be given out at the meeting. (This ma- terial will not be available before that time.) Registration is held early In Oct, for Feb., June and Aug. )graduates. Place- ment activity begins in Oct. and it is important for all seniors to get ma- terial at this time. Some interviews are held in the fall even for June 'and Aug. graduates. Students receiving a teaching certifi- cate from the School of Education are required to register with the Bureau of Appointments before their certificate is granted. -Daily-William Kimba KAREN TAYLOR--At 4 p.m. this afternoon Miss Taylor, '80SM will appear as soloist with the Plymouth Symphony Orchestra at the Plymouth High School. She will play Beethoven's Second Con- certo..Miss Taylor was winner last summer of the First Bendetson Netzorg Memorial Award (sponsored by the Bohemian Musician's Club of Detroit). She appeared last summer as soloist with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Midwestern Art Conferene To Convene at University r t r i AAry ' l ' 1 President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold open house for students at their home Wed., Oct. 15, from 4:00 to :6:00 p.m. Students who expect to receive edu- cation and- training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G. I. Bill) or Public Law 634 (Orphan's Bill) and have NOT stopped in at the Office of Veterans' Affairs, 555 Admin. Bldg. with TUITION RECEIPT should do so as soon as possible. Lecturies Public Lecture: Asian Studies Com- mittee and Center for Japanese Studies presents "Communist China in Per- spective," Prof. Mary C. Wright, Stan-. ford Univ. 4:15 p.m., Mon., Oct. 13, Aud, C, Angell Hall. Public Health Assembly: "Historical and Social Background of the Modern Public Health Movement II." Nathan Sinai, Prof. of Pub. Health and" Direc., Bureau of Public -Health Economics. Mon., Oct. 13, 4:00 p.m. School of Pub. lic Health Aud. The Midwestern College Art Conference will be held at the University Thursday through Sat= urday, Oct. 16-18. The art school will host the conference, sponsored by the Mid- western College Art Association.' The conference will- create at opportunity for the exchange of ideas and general information or various aspects of art, and stim- ulate continued interest in con- TU'Receives Army Award The University was presented, recently, with an award from the U.S. Army Signal Corps for its research project called "Project Michigan." Willow Run Laboratories, a Uni- versity division, has been work- ing on this project since.1953. The research program is providing ad- vanced research and technical ad- vice'on the scientific developments needed to insure combat surveil- lance capability for the Army of the future. temporary art problems and moti- vate experimental and creative approaches to the teaching of art according to. art school ofdlcials. On Thursday, in the Architec- ture Auditorium, there will be a panel discussion from 2 to 4:30 p.m. on "Relationship of Museum and Departmental Collections to the Teaching Program." On Friday at 10 a.m., Lloyd Goodrich, director of New York's Whitney Museum of American Art, will talk on "The Artist in Ameri- can Society," and Erwin Panofsky, art philosopher, Institute for Ad- vanced Study, Princeton, will speak on "The Virtues and the Arts of Funerary Sculpture" at 2 p.m. Frederick Kiesler, sculptor, ar- chitect and social commentator, is scheduled to speak Saturday at 9:30 on "Art of the Teaching of Resistance." Approximately 175 professors. of art, chairmen of art depart- ment and museum curators and directors are expected to attend. In conjunction with the con- ference, a faculty exhibit will be on display until Nov. 23 in the Art. Museum, Alumni Memorial Hall. University Lecture: Dept. of Psychia- try presents "The Focus of Attention." Dr. Enoch Callaway, III, Psychiatric In- stitute, Univ. Hospital, Baltimore, Md. 8:00 p.m., Tues., Oct. 14, Children's Psychiatric Hospital 'Auditorium. {Concerts Stanley Quartet: The first fall con- cert by the Stanley Quartet will be presented on Tues., Oct. 14, 8:30 p.m. Rackham Lecture Hall. The Quartet, Gilbert Ross, first violin, Gustave Ro,- seels; second violin, Robert Courte, vi- ola, and Oliver Edel, cello, have in- cluded in this program quartets' by Beethoven, Benjamin Lees and De- bussy. Open to the general public without charge. Academic Notices PERSONNEL REQUESTS United States Civil Service Commis- sion, Washington 25, D.C. Editorial Clerk, Personnel Clerk, Statistical Clerk, Supply Clerk, _and Traffic Clerk. Grade GS-4. Persons appointed to these posi- tions will perform difficult and respon- sible clerical ,work related to one of these related fields, or they may super- vise and work with a group of em- ployees in positions at lower grades en- -gaged in various tasks related to their field. No closing date for filing of ap- plications. 2. Personnel Officer, Place- ment Officer, Position Classifier, Sal- ary and wage specialist, and Employee Relations Officer. Grades' GS-9 to GS 12. No closing date for filing of appli- cations, These positions involve work in the various fields of personnel man- agement. Persons appointed 'to these positions will be responsible for provid- ing technical and staff guidance and assistance to manegement and super- visors of operating programs in the phase of personnel management to which they are assigned. For further information, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Extension 3371. All -Teacher's Certificate Candidates:. The Teachers' CertificateApplication must be turned in to the School of Education by Nov. 1. The address is 1439 Univ. Ele. School. Caracas, Venezuela - Applications to- teach in Caracas, Venezuela must be submitted by Dec. 15. 1958 for the. 1959-1960 school year. Interviews are held in the United States in' March, 1959 in, New York, Detroit, Chicago, Minneapolis, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Vacancies exist In elemen- tary, music and art teacher-consult- ants, math, science, English, social stu- dies, and physical education. Require- ments are: B.A. degree (M.A. for mu- sic and art); state teaching certificate; 5 years experience (2 in grade or sub- ject to be taught); no dependents; wo- men if elementary; interview; recom- mendations. For any additional information con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. t Admission Test for Graduate Study in Business: Candidates for this test are reminded that applications must be received by the Educational Testing Service at least 2 weeks prior to the test date, Nov. 1, 1958. Applications and general information bulletins on the test are available in Room 150, School of 'Bus. Admin. 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