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October 15, 1958 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1958-10-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

V, nt.tAltvn 11. 14x t

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Yy

~JL' A ~.FLDZ~iA~~ .I..P, .L~UL~

'U' Requests Building Funds

I

DAIL

(CLASSIFIED

(Continued from Page 1)

eling will be done on a similar
basis to that done in conversion.
of the old Ann Arbor high school
into the Frieze building, he added.
Special maintenance will cost
$400,000 for the coming year..This
request will cover renovations in
teaching laboratories, toilet 4acili-
ties, elevators, electrical facilities,
and surface and floor repairs.
The University is asking the
legislature for $613,383 for com-
pletion of construction begun on.
the Mental Research building.
Last year the State appropriated
$181,605 to this project and al-
lowed up to $845,000 to be given
in the future from the State 'Hos-
pital Building fund. This year's
request represents the remainder
of that appropriation.
Ask Hospital Funds.
An appropriation of $1,219,000
is needed to fulfill plans for the

pediatrics unit in Children's Hos-
pital. A request of $40,000 to plan
the Cancer Research building and
of $20,000 to plan a Maintenance
and Storage building was also
made.
A survey of facilities necessary
to study chronic diseases will be
begun with a legislative appro-
priataion .of $100,000.
* A total of $1,138,987 was re-
quested for remodeling and addi-
tions at the hospital and medical
center. $175,000 will be needed to
complete the electrical renova-
tions started four years ago.-Last
year the legislature appropriated
$150,000 to this project,
Plan Renovations
Plans have been made to use
$300,000 in general renovations
and $32,000 is needed to begin
plans for further remodeling.
Renovations at Childrens Hos-
pital will cost $50,000 and $339,-

000 is necessary to add to the Pa-
tient Rehabilitation Center. Ad-
ditions to Simpson Memorial will
cost $242,987.
The appropriation for the
1959-60 capital outlay program is
the initial step in the University's
five year building plan. Approxi-
mately $131 million will be need-
ed to complete the five year plan
for both the medical and educa-
tional facilities.
Last year the University re-
ceived $1,515,000 of the $14,993,-
500 requested. The appropriation
was for completion of construc-
tion already begun and was exclu-
sive of the $181,605 received for
construction of the Mental Health
Research building..
The request of last year includ-
ed $11,517,000 for educational fa-
cilities and $3,476,500 for Univer-
sity hospital needs.

II
-1 - r - _a rnww.

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

(Continued from Page 4),
hours and procedures are the same as
above for "Flu."
International Center Tea: Thurs.,
Oct. 16, 4:30-6:00 p.m. at the Inter-
national Center.
Open House at the Institute for So-
cial Research for all interested faculty
and 'graduate students in the social'
and behavioral sciences. Wed., Oct. 15,
3:00 p.m., ISE Coffee Room.
Directory.: It is expected that the Di-
rectory for 1958-59 will be ready for dis-
tribution about the end of Oct. or the
first of Nov. The chairmen of the vari-
ous depts. and directors of other units
will please requisition the number of
copies required for University campus
use. Requisitions should be sent to the
Purchasing Dept. and delivery will be.
made by campus mail. If individuals
want a copy for home use the Directory
will be available on payment of 75c at
the Cashier's Office, Main Floor,
Admin. Bldg. Business concerns or in-
dividuals not 'connected with the Uni-
versity may purchase a Directory at a
cost of $2.00.
Engineering. Freshman A s s e m b l y:
"Activity Carnival" - The Engineering
Council cordially invites all freshmen
engineers to a display and dramatiza-
tion of the special activities open to
engineering students. rThurs., Oct. 16,
7:00 p.m, in Trueblood Aud. Frieze
Bldg.
Agenda, Student Government Coun-
cil, Oct. 15, 1958, 7:30 p.m.,. Council im..
Minutes of previous meeting.
Officer reports: President: Letters,
Board in Review; Vice-President
(Exec). Appointment to vacancy;.
Vice-President (Admire,); Treasurer,
Budget.
Forum Committee.
Standing Committees.
National and international; Public;
Relations; Education and Student
Welfare, prospectus, State Legisla-
ture; Student Activities Committee,
Activities: WAA-Lantern Night, Nov.
3 at 8 p.m. in Hill Aud.; Political.
Rally '_ Oct. 31.
Elections Committee - report.
Old Business -- NSA. report.
New Business - Student Activities
Scholarship, Amendment to Consti-
tution.:
Adjournment.
Members and Constituents Time.
,Announcements.
Lectures
Sydney Chapman Lecture: "The Air
Above." Thurs., Oct. 16, 4:00 p.m., Aud.
C, Angell Hall.
Speech Assembly: Dr. ,Roger W.
Heyns, Dean of the College of L., S. and
A., will speak on "Social Support for
IOrganization
Notices
(Use of this column for announce-
ments of meetings is available to of-
ficially recognized and registered stu-
dent organizations only. Organizations
planning to be active for the current
semester should' register. Forms avail-
able, 2011 Student Activities Bldg.)
Cinema Guild, petitions for co-spon-
sorship of movies with Cinema Guild
now available to registered student or-
ganizations in need of funds. 1st floor,
Student Activities Bldg. Petitions due
Oct. 10 (Thursday).
w a C

Higher Education" at 4:00 p.m. today,
Rackham Lecture Hall.
Research Club: The Oct. meeting of
the Research Club will be held on Wed.,
Oct. 15, 8:00 p.m., Rackham Amphi-
theatre. "The Great Lakes Area and
the Coming of Man" will be the sub.
ject of papers by Profs. J. H. Zum-
berge (Geology) and J.B. Griffin (An-
thropology).
concerts
Carillon Recital: Assist. Univ. Caril-
lonneur Sidney F. Giles will present a
recital from the belltower of Burton.
Memorial Tower on Thurs., Oct. 16, 7:15
p.m In addition to arrangements of
compositions by Gluck, Beethoven,
Mendelssohn and Vivaldi, Mr. Giles will
include on his program, compositions
for the carillon by Vaii den Gheyn,
Loos, Lefevere, Giles, van Hoof and
Clement.,
Academic'Notices
German makeup examinations will be
held Fri., Oct. 17, from 2 to 4 p.m. in
Rm. 1088, Frieze Bldg. Please register.
with departmental secretary by Wed.
noon, Oct. 15.
The interdepartmental Survey of the
Soviet Union will meet beginning Oct.
14, Angell Hall, Aud. B, 11:00 am,,
Tues. and Thurs.. This course is Econ.
195, History 195, Poli. Sci. 195, Geog. 195,
and Slavic Lang., and Lit.,185.
Botanical Seminar: Dr. Guenther
Stotzky, Plant Nuitrition Project on
"Factors Affecting Microbial Activity in
Soils." Wed., Oct. 15, 4:15 p.m., 1139 Nat.
Sci. Bldg. Refreshments served at 4:00.
School of Bus. Admin.: Students
from other schools and colleges intend-
ing to aply for admission for the7
Spring semester should secure appli-
cation forms in. Rmn. 150, School of
Bus. Admin., as soon as possible.
Mathematical Statistics Seminar:
Will meet Oct. 16, 4:00-6:00 p.m., Rm.
3010 Angell Hall.; Prof. James G. Wen-
del will discuss a paper by R. R. Baha-
dur,. "A Note on the, Fundamental
Identity of Sequential Analysis" inthe
June 1958 Annals of Statistics.
Doctoral Examination for Marvin
Leonel Esch, Speech; thesis: "Student
Speaking at the University of'iMichoi-
gan, 1841-1884," Wed., Oct. 15, 2520
Frieze Bldg., 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. M.i
Sattler.
Foreign Visitors
Following are the foreign visitors who
will be on the campus this week on
the dates indicated. Program arrange-
ments are being made by the Interna-
tional Center: Mrs. Clifford R Miller.
Mr. B. C. Asthana, Officer on Special
Duty, Examinations Research Project &+
Executive Secretary, Psychometric Unit,
Aligarh Muslim University, India, Oct.
12-19; Mr. R. Prasad, Professor & Head
of Department of Education, Patna Uni-
versity, Patna, India, Oct. 12-19; Mr.
L. B. Deshpande, Controller of Exam-
inations. Osmania University, Hyderbad,
India, Oct. 12-19; Mr. V. K. Kothurkar,
Head, of Department " of Experimental
Psychology, Poona University, Poona,
India, Oct. 12-19; Mr. Ernesto Corcino,
Cultural Assistant, USIS, Manilla, Phil-
ippines, Oct. 16-22; and Mr. Mitsusada
Inoue, Assistant Prof. of History at
Tokyo University, Japan, Oct. 16-23.
Placement Notices
Registration. Seniors and graduate
students who were unable to attend
the Placement Meeting yesterday may
ri

pick up registration material in the
office any day this week or next. Of-
fice hours: 8:30-12, 1:30-4:30, Mon.,
through Friday.
Personnel Requests:
United States Information Agency,
Washington 25, D.C. Junior Officer Pro-
gram. Foreign Service. Age 21-31. Must
have been a citizen of the United
States for at least 10 years. Must have
Master's degree or equivalent in an
academic field pertinent to the work
of the Agency. Candidates with useful
proficiency in speaking a foreign lan-
guage, will have preference. Must be
willing to serve anywhere in the world.
Cutler-Hammer, Inc., 315 N. 12th St.,
Milwaukee 1, Wisc. Marketing Research
Analyst. Will work in Milwaukee and
will be assigned a wide variety of prod-
uct research, distribution surveys, etc.
Prefer that he have Master's degree in
Marketing with strong academic back-
ground In marketing, statistics, and
economics. Bachelor's degree with rela-
tively more limited backgrounds will
be considered.
St. Clair Rubber Co., Marysville,
Mich. Industrial Engineer with B.S. in
Indus. Eng, or Mech. Eng. with I.E.
option. Experience, 1-3 yrs., in one or
more phases of I.E. as follows: Time,
study, methods, plant layout, quality
control, production control, material
handling or estimating.
NationalrCarbon Co., Divisionhof-
Union Carbide Corp., Cleveland, Ohio.
B.S. or M.S. degree in E.E., physics or,
engineering physics with major in
electronics. Should have had one or
two years experience In transistor air-
cuitry and/or in acoustic measure-
ments.
City of Flint, Mich., Civil Service
Commission. Hospital Comptroller. Planl
and direct all fiscal operations of 629
bed General Hospital. Requires 5 yrs.
experience in accounting work -- pref-
erably supervisory - one of which in
a Hospital and degree with major in
Accounting.
Hubbard and Company, Chicago, 11.
1) Ceramics Engineer. Degree in ceram-
ics engineering. Age up to 35. Prefer
man with experience in research and
development of specialty ceramics in
high. voltage electrical transmission
field. Will consider recent college grad-
uate.'2) Senior Project Engineer.-B.S.
E.E.. Power option preferred. Age to 45.
Need 5 years experience in research,
development and application of elsec-
trical distribution septem protection
equipment, particularly fuse cut-outs
and interruptors:dMust have supervi
sory capacity to direc~t established de-
sign section of junior project engineers.
Personnel Interviews:
HI. E. Lennon Inc., Farmington, Mich.
A representative from- this company
may bein Ann Arbor, Oct. 15. They are
distributors for the state of Michigan
for a panufacturer of premium indus-
trial lines and want to talk to anyone
interested in handling the territory of
the western half of Michigan. Inter-
ested In a man who has at least 1 year
of college, who is married and mechan-
ically inclined and who resides in the
Kalamazoo area.
Exhibit: The Naval Officer Procure-
ment Team is set up in the Michigan
Union, across from the Cafeteria. To-
day, Oct. 15," from 9 to 3:30 they will
be available for any students who wish
to talk to them. They will answer any
and all questions on how to fulfill your
military obligation while serving as an
officer In the finest Navy in the world,
All programs are covered: Aviation, In-
telligence, Legal, O.C.S., Supply and
the Wave programs. Lt. Dixie Dunham
is available to answer questions on the
Wave Officer and Nurses Programs,
LCDR Dick Zettel handles the O.C.B.
and associated programs, and CDR
Chet Poole and Lt. Lee Morrisett will
cover Naval Aviation.

BUSINESS SERVICES
ON PACKARD right off State Street-
That's our convenient location. Our
hours are convenient too - 7:30 A.M.
't£1 midnight.
RALPH'S MARKET
(formerly Freeman's)
709 Packard NO 2-3175
"Just two doors from the Blue Front"
)J41
RITZ
BEAUTY SALON
Complete line of Beauty work
605 E; Williams
Phone NO 8-7066
)J2
Shop for
SEAFOOD SPECIALTIES,
IMPORTED FOOD' ITEMS,
AND
GOURMET SPECIALTIES
Washington Fish Market
208 E. Washington NO 2-2589
)J10
RIDING LESSONS-Private and Semi-
private. Jumping - Equitation - Dres-
sage. Transportation available for
pairs of riders. Horses boarded and
trained. 3351 North Maple Road. NO
2-8026. )J42
Ladies Barber & Beauty Shop
1108% S. University
The Only Ladies Barber Shop in
Ann Arbor
"Exclusive But Not Expensive"
PHONE FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY!
NO\2-7538 NO 2-7538
)J40
A REAL SPORTS CAR
1957 TR-3 Triumph Roadster
$2,095
Mich. European Car Corp.
Liberty at Ashley NO 5-5800
)J33
ONE-DAY SERVICE
and COMPLETE SERVICE at
SANFORDS ...
Shoe Repairing
Hat Cleaning
Tailoring
Pressing
Shoe Shining
119 East Ann Street
(opposite court house)
NO 8-6966 )J32

LINES
2
3
4.
Classified+

Figure 5 average words to a line.
deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 11:00 A.M. Saturday
Phone NO 2-3241

FOR RENT CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIE!
TWO BEDROOM furnished apartment WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP
for 2 or 3 students. $100. or $120. All Bumping and Painting
utilities paid. 910 ). Forest. Call NO 2007 South State NO 2-3350
8-6583. ) C83)S
SIX ROOMS and bath, unfurnished ex-
cept for stove and refrigerator. Call
NO 2-3211. Evenings NO 2-2075. )C82 SERV ICE
TWO VERY clean single rooms for
students or working men. Located
close to Campus. Call NO 5-5157 after FO R A LL
4 p.m. )C81
DO YOU WANT LOWER RENT? Two IMP RTD
bedroom furnished cottage. Portage i1PORTED
Lake. $45. HU 3-0794. )C79
% DOUBLE for man. Reasonable rent .CARS
includes linen, COOKING FACILI-
TIES, parking, T.V. and automatic
washing facilities. HA 6-2321, after AUTHORIZED SALES
6. If no answer, NO 5-6712 and ask for AND SERVICE
Dale. )C80
APARTMENT NEAR CAMPUS-2 bed-
.room, unfurnished with stove and
refrig. Very nicely decorated. $115.00
per month. 1114 S. Forest, NO 3-5098, AUSTI N MORRIS
NO 3-1447. )075
LARGE ROOM for male students, % AUSTIN-H EALEY
block from campus. Cooking privi-
leges. 417 E. Liberty. NO 5-7588. )C52 JAGUAR LLOYD
SINGLE ROOM for man. Near Campus. ALFA-ROMEO
NO 8-8681 after 5:00 P.M. 1011 E.
University. )C49
LARGE Single' Room for Man. ThreeV ERSEA
Blocks from Campus. Across from
Wine's Field, near all sports areas.
Linen furnished. Call NO 2-8372.A UL E
)C25
TRAILER SPACE 331 S. Fourth Ave. NO 2-2541
AVAILABLE C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
US-23 15 miles North of Ann Arbor. Friendly service is. our business.
Large lots, reasonable rates, pleas- Atlas, tires, batteries and acces-
ant surroundings. sories. Waranteed & guaranteed.
See us for the best price on new
STARLIGHT TRAILER COURT & used tires. Road service -
10175 Bishop Rd. ACademy 7-7199 mechanic on duty.
)C3 "You expect more from Standard,
and you get it!"
CAMPUS-1 BLOCK. Modern furnished 1220 S. University at Forest
apartments. 514 S. Forest. NO 2-1443. NO 8-9168 )SI
)C4
HELP WANTEDLOST AND FOUND
'O O aLOST-Girl's gold ring with initials
POSITION as Resident House Parents R.G. Call Stockwell Hall Ex. 3509.
for older Grad. couple who will be )A28
in city for 2 or more years. Main-
tenance and salary. Time for hus- LOST-Cat; large, orangeand.white
band's graduate work. Call Mr. Clif female. Vic. E. University and Pack-
ton. NO 3-5011. )H16 ard. NO 3-5447. )A30
MUSICAL MDSE., $5.00 REWARD for recovery. Black, 3-
RADIOS, REPAIRS speed, Norman Bike. License 2223
Taken Oct. 9 from Kreske Medical
RARE Violins & String Instrument $15.00 reward if information leads t
repairs. Pianos (Baldwin, Ivers & thief. Call NO 3-8785, write 1505 Trav-
Pond, Estey) and Organs(Baldwin, er, or notify police. . )A29
Estey,. Thomas) New and Used.
Terms.

MICHIGAN DAILY
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

)

1 DAY
.12
x1.12

3 DAYS
2.00
2.40
2.80

FINISHED WORK-Specialize in,
ton blouses. Ironings separately.'
pickup and delivery. Siamese
service. Also Siamese cat for
NO 2-9020.

cot-
Free
stud
sale.
)J29

SMITH'S
CARPETS-- RUGS
LINOLEUM -TILE
SAVE on Carpet Remnants--
many sizes and colors.
CARPET STORE-
207 E. Washington St.
LINOLEUM STORE----
205 N. Main St.
)J14
POTATOES--U.S. No. 1 $3.00 - 100 lbs.
Delivered C.O.D. Also Cabbage $1.00
Bu. - .Tomatoes - Apples $2.50 Bu.
- Onions.. DeMarco Produce. NO
2-7747 )J24
FOX MOTEL
Room Phones
Free TV
2805 E. Michigan HU 2-2204
)J8

MADDY MUSIC
508 E. William NO 3-3223
)Xi

r-----------------------------------------
A Campus-to-Career Case History
I

COLUMBIA
HI-Fl CONSOLE
at table model price
SPECIAL
$129.95

MUSCCENTER
300 S. Thayer NO 2-2500
)X6

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