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November 19, 1958 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1958-11-19

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

9R 19, 19s -THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FBA Aims I
By THOMAS KABAKER
'The FBA can save your house
money."
This is the motto of the Fra-
ternity Buyer's Association. The'
FBA was first formed as the Pur-
chasing Commission of the Inter-
fraternity Council in the spring
of 1955.
In the fall of 1955 the Fraternity
Buyer's Association was incorpor-
ated as an independent organiza-
tion, governed by a board of direc-
tors composed of five alumni and
five stewards elected from the
IFCs Steward Council.

W"! /'°WVO i A aa'U r 9r Jl'

Lo Save Affiliates Money
During the first year serious Association's office expenses. All
problems were encountered. The excess service charges are re-
student group could not sustain turned,.. ross said. He noted that
office continuity and the billing
and ordering was erratic as the "Under the charter, the FBA can-
students found the work too much not keep one cent of excess service
as the volume increased, according charge."
to Assistant Dean of Men William This year meat has been added
Cross. to the list of produce handled by
The Board of Directors, there- the FBA. "Now there is no type of7
fore, elected to employ a part- food that cannot be purchased
time manager to.do the billing and through the Association," Cross
check the orders. Now the FBA said. "We hope to expand next in
also employs a part-time auditor. the laundry and dry cleaning field.
A five per cent service charge There is a lot of money to be
is added to each bill to cover the saved there."

DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
OPPORTUNITY
FOR MAN OR WOMAN
Responsible person from this area
to service and collect from auto-
matic dispensers. No selling. Age
not essential. Car, references, and
$800,00 working capital necessary.
7-12 hours weekly nets up to $300.00
monthly. Possibility fulltime work.
For local interview give phone and
particulars. Write United Sales &
Mfg. Co., Dept. 6, 4021 Vernon
Avenue South, Minn 16, Minnesota.
)CC2
TRANSPORTATION

PERSONALI

MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS

BDAILY C FFICIA L BULLETIN

(Continued from Page 4)
Dr. Benjamin Schwartz, prof. of his-
tory, Harvard University, will speak
on "Chinese Communist Thought To-
day," Fri., Nov. 21, 4:15 p.m., Angell
Hall, Aud. C. The lecture is being spon.
sored by the Center for Japanese Stu-
dies. The public is invited.
Linguistics Club meeting, Thurs., Nov.
20, 8:00 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre.
Speaker: Dr. Fritz Meinecke, Univ. of
Frankfurt, "From the Notebook of a
Foreign Student of American Linguis-
tics."
Research Club: The November meet-
ing of the Research Club will be held
on Wed., Nov. 19, 8:00 p.m. Rackham
Amphitheatre. "Nuclear Radiation and
its Effects on Human Tissue," will be
the subject of papers by Professors H. J.
Gomberg (Nuclear Engineering) and
F. H. Bethell (Internal Medicine.)
Plays3
The Dept. of Speech announces the
third in its current playbill of experi-
mental one-act plays. Eugene Ionesco's
"The Lesson" will be presented in the
Organization
Graduate Student Coffee Hour, Nov.
19. 4-5:30 p.m., Rackham Bldg., 2nd
Floor, W. Lounge. All graduate ptudents
invited,
Graduate Student Council, 3rd gener-
al meeting, Nov. 20, 7:30 p.m., Rackhaml
Bldg., W. Conf. Room.
"* "
Newman Club, "Modern Medicine in
the Jungle" (discussion and movie by 2
nuns who are medical missionaries),
Nov. 19, 8 p.m., 331 Thompson, '
* " *p/
Sigma Alpha Eta, meeting, Nov. 20,
7:30 p.m.. Speech Clinic, Rm. 108,
University Christian Federation, mid-
week worship, Nov. 19, 4:15 p.m., Doug-
las Memorial Chapel, State and William.
Sponsored by 11 denominations.
La Sociedad Hispanica, "Tertulla,"
coffee and conversation hour, Nov. 19,
3-5 p.m., 3050 FB.
International Studenits are cordially
invited to a tea in their honor on Nov.
20, 3:30-5 p.m., Mosher Hall.

Arena Theater, Frieze Bldg., today at
4 p.m. Admission free.
Concerts
The University Symphony Orchestra,
Josef Blatt, conductor, will appear in"
a concert in Hill Aud. on Wed., Nov. 18,
8:30 p.m. Included on the program will
be the Brahms "Symphony No. 2 in D
major," the Overture to Rossini's "Bar-
ber of Seville," Prelude to "Afternoon
of a Faun" by Debussy, and Mussorg-
sky's "Pictures from an Exhibition."
Open to the general public without
charge.
Academic Notices
The examination for History 180 will
be held' Fri., Nov. 21, in Nat. Sci. Aud.
The General Electric and Charitable
Fund is offering 34 fellowships for the
academic year 1959-60. Field will in-
clude Ph'sical Sciences, Engineering,
Industrial Management, Arts and Sci-
ences, Graduate Law, and Business.
The stipend will be $1750 for a Fellow
who is single, $2100 if married without
children, and $2500 for a married Fel-
low with children. Tuition and fees
are also paid. Application forms and
further information may be obtained
from the Graduate School Office. Ap-
plications will be submitted to the
General Electric Company by Dean
Ralph A. Sawyer in the Graduate
School, and all applications should be
in his hands by Dec. 24, 1959.
Doctoral Examination for George
Hunter Miley, Chemical Engineering;
thesis. "The Use of Nuclear Reactor
Radiation to Promote Chemical Reac-
tons," Wed., Nov. 19, 3201 E. Eng.
Bldg., 4.00 p.m. Chairman, J. J. Martin.
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.
Mrs. Marie C. W. Rohling, Delegate
member of the Social Economic Coun-
cil of the Netherlands, Netherlands,
Nov. 12-20; Mr. V. S. Sakari Saarinen,
Managing Director, Filmiyhtyma Oy,
Finland, Nov. 48; and Mr. Leonce hras,
Musical Director of the Flemish Na-
tional Radio, Brussels. Belgium, Nov. 18,
The following foreign visitor will be
on the campus this week. Program ar-
rangements are being made by Mr. Ar-
thur Dunham, School of Social Work.
Marjorie Each, Social Work and Com-
munity Organization, Australia, Nov.
f6-29. ,
The following foreign visitor will be
on the campus this week. Program ar-
rangementsrare being made by Mr.
Hu~gh Patrick, Dept. rof' Economics:
Mr. Miyake, Secretary, Bank of Japan,
Tokyo, Japan, Nov. 20-21.
Placement Notices
Civil Service Notice:
Michigan Civil Service Commission,
Lansing, Mich. 1) Employment Coun-
selor Trainee I. 2) Personnel Methods1
Trainee I. 3) Personnel Technician I.
Applications must be postmarked or
filed at the State Civil Service Com-
mission office no later than Nov. 19,
1958. Applicants ' must submit trans-
cript of college credits with their ap-
plications to be accepted for these ex-
aminations. Applicants for these exam-
inations who anticipate graduation
from college by Jan, 1959 will also be
coidered. Positions in these classes
are found in the following countie6:
Employment Counselor Trainee I ---
W ayne County only. Personnel Methods
Trainee I - Wayne County only. Per-
sonnel Technician I - Ingham County
only.
Personnel Requests:
Armstrong Cork Company, Lancaster,
Pa, Accountant: Bus. Ad. degree with
accounting major. Age up to 28. Two
months classroom training in Control-.
ler's Office in Lancaster. 2) Advertis-
ing, Proniotion and Public Relations.
(Creative writer). Degree in Journal.
or English preferred although any de-
gree may be considered as long as a

man has demonstrated creative writing
ability. Age up to 28. On-the-job train-
ing, participating in the development
of advertising campaigns, brochures,
etc. 3) Chemist-Doctorate. Doctorate
degree in organic or physical chem. Age
up to 35. Training, general indoctrina-
tion into the company. 4) Chemists or
Chemical Engineers - Research and
Development. Bachelor's or Master's
degree in Chem. or Chem. Engineering.
Age up to 35. On-the-job training. 5)
Engineering. Mech. Engineering degree
preferred. Age up to 28. Eight months'
formalized training in Lancaster. 6)
Industrial Engineering. Industrial En-
gineering type degree. Age up to 28.
Two months' formal training in Lan-
caster plus one or two months' on-the-
job training in one of the company's
plants. 7) Production Planning. Any
degree may be considered although
there is a preference for Bus. Ad., In-
dustrial Management or Econ. Age
up to 28. Training on-the-job in Lan-
caster. 8) Sales - Non-Technical. Any
degree, prefer Bus. Ad., Econ. or Lib-
eral Arts. Age up to 28. Marital status-
single. Five months of formal classroom
training given at the general office of
the company in Lancaster.
State of Michigan, Civil Service
Comm. Lansing, Mich. Conservation
Foreman A. Applications must be post-
marked or filed at the State Civil
Service Commission Office no later
thanDec.. 3, 1958. Experience and Edu-
cation: Two years exp. in some type of
conservation field project work at not
less than the B level, and graduation
from high school; or two years of exp.
as a semi-skilled worker i building
construction or maintena e. or ma-
chinery maintenance and repair and
graduation from high school. 2) Law
Stenographer Clerk A. File applications
by Dec. 3, 1958. Experience and Educa-
tion: Two years of exp. in stenograph-
ic work, one year of which shall have
involved the taking of legal dictation,
and graduation from high school.
Holley Carburetor Co., Van Dyke,
Mich. Research Dept. Need five gradu-
ate engineers, three electrical and two
mechanical. These men will be work-
ing on a rapidly expandIing project in
the design and development of analog
and digital computer accessories and
off line data processing equipment.
F'or the electrical engineers they prefer
men with exp. in complex electronic
circuit design and some exp. in digital
logic. The mechanical engineers would
need exp. in the design and develop-
ment of small, high precision parts for
complex systems linkages and assem-
blies to tie in with the electronic units.
Computer exp. is preferred but not
mandatory,
Hamilton, Ohio, Civil Service Com-
mission. Bachelor's degree, preferably
In the sanitary sciences. Exp. in public
health desirable. Must be U.S. citizen
and must be between the ages of 22-50.
Sanitarian 'II. Duties: Fieldwork of a
technical nature in one or more public
health program areas.
Southwest Research Institute, San
Antonio, Texas. Excellent opportunities
for graduate students interested in en-
tering research. They need Electronic
Engineers, Structural Engineers and
Applied Mathematicians. Prefer per-
sonnel who have obtained their M.S. or
Ph.D. Degrees.
State of Connecticut, Civil Service
Commission, Hartford, Conn. 1) Legis-
lative Reference Librarian. Closing
date is Nov. 26, 1958. General statement
of duties: Has charge of the Legislative
Reference Section in the Public Serv-
ices Division of the State Library.
Works under the direction of a State
Library Division Chief, who reviews,
work for effectiveness and conform-
ance with policy. 2) District Director
of Welfare II. Closing date: Nov. 26,
1958. Directs the operations of one or
more district welfare offices, having a
total case load of over 3,000. in accord-
ance with established policy in the
implementation of laws, program ob-
jectives, and standards; maintains and
develops community relations. 3) Dis-
trict Director of Welfare I. Closing date
is Nov. 26. Directs the operations of
one or more district welfare offices,
having a total case load of not more
than 3,000, in accordance with estab-
lished policy in the implementation of
laws, program objectives, and stand-
ards, maintains and develops commu-
nity relations.

HAVE ROOM for 2 riders to California
for Thanksgiving. Leaving Sunday.
Share expenses and driving. George
Tryon. Call after 6:00 p.m. 315 Ferris
corner S. Hamilton, Ypsilanti. Near
Bus Station. )011
WANTED RIDE-Mon. thru Fri.; must
arrive Mich. Union 7:40 A.M. from
North Campus. Call NO 3-3831, Eve.
)G2
WANTED: Daily ride from Plymouth to
North Campus to arrive Ann Arbor
by 8:00 a.m. and leave about 5:00
p.m. Contact Mrs. Leech at NO 3-
1511, Ext. 86424 till 5:00 p.m. and
after at GL 3-5189. )G12
RIDE 'WANTED from West Detroit
area to campus Monday-Friday. Call
BR 2-1562. )G13
BUSINESS SERVICES
BEAUTIFUL GIFTS
We carry gifts suitable for everyone
and all occasions. Headquarters for
ceramic tiles. Call NO 2-7471 and
NO 3-0503 anytime. )J105
On Packard right off State Street-.
That's our convenient location.
Our hours are convenient too --
7:30 a.m. 'til midnight
RALPH'S MARKET
(formerly Freeman's)
709 Packard NO 2-3175
"Just two doors from the Blue Front"
)J104
Shop for
SEAFOOD SPECIALTIES.
,IMPORTED FOOD ITEMS,
AND
GOURMET SPECIALTIES
Washington Fish Market
208 E. Washington NO 2-2589
)J10
RITZ
BEAUTY SALON
Complete line of Beauty work
605 E. Williams
Phone NO 8-7066
)J2
SMITH'S
Ann Arbor's
First Carpet Store

EVERY WEDNESDAY THERE IS AN{
ALL-CAMPUS
MIDWEEK
WORSH I P
Sponsored by 11 Denominations
Thru U.C.F. (University Christian
Federation
4:15-4:45 p.mn.
At Douglas Memorial Chapel
(Corner of State and William,
)F138
RUSHED? Clutched? Solve your typing
problems. Call NO 3-4014. )F169
BORED Sat, night? Try the LEAGUE
SNACK BAR. Food - dancing - enter-
tainment-Free admission-9-12 p.m.
)F18
THE OLD PHILOSOPHER--
There are two times in a man's life,
when he should not speculate: when
he can't afford it and when he can.
)F
EVERYTHING'S up to date in Ann Ar-
bor-"Oklahoma." ticket sales have
begun. )F167
TWO TICKETS to O.S.U. game, Call
NO 2-2108 after 6:00 P.M. )F166
CAMPUS CLOSEUPS
Do You Know?
Janet Turner .......... NO 3-4164
John D. Eick ............NO 8-9085
ARE THOSE GRADES discouraging?
Try the Union Tutorial File for the
best in tutors. )F126
WHO WILL BE Bunthorne's bride? See
Patience Thurs., Fri. or Sat. and sat-
isfy your curiosity. G&S. )F165
WANTED: Adult students who are reg-
istered voters in Oakland County to
do enjoyable and worthwhile week-
end work. Contact Bill Beer at NO
3-7541, Ext. 465 after 7:30 p.m. )F148
STUDENTS
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
Esquire 1 year $4.00
Holiday 9 months $3.50
Time 1 year 54.00
Sports Ill. 1 year $4.00
Sat. Eve. Post 35 weeks $3.50
Reporter 1 year $4.50
Phone Student Periodical Agency
NO 2-3061
)F163
HAVE A custom made dress for the
holidays this year. Shirl's Sewing
Shop. 3016 Packard Road. NO 8-7143.
Evenings Call NO 3-7341. )F159
HELP WANTED
WANTED: Part-time steno-typist, morn-
ings. Local Organization. Write Box
H26, % Michigan Daily. )H26
WANTED: Couple or single woman for
small home for girls. Husband may
be a student or employed elsewhere.
References required. Interest in help-
ing adolescents essential. Salary plus
maintenance. Phone NO 2-5834 late
evenings or before 9:00 a.m. )H25
POSITION as Resident House Parents'
for older Grad. couple who will be
in city for 2 or more years. Main-
tenance and salary. Time for hus-
band's graduate work. Call Mr. Clif-
ton. NO 3-5011. )H16
Read and Use
Daily Classifieds

HI Fl STUDIO
An amazing inventory of HI-FI
components available to you at
catalogue price.
KITS
f We stock amplifier, AMN - FM
tuner and speaker enclosure
kits in several brands.
121 and 131 S. University
NO 8-7942
)X5
GUITAR LESSONS: Guitars. Qualified
instructor. Call Maddy Music for de-
tails. NO 3-3395. 508 E. William. )X12
RARE Violins & String Instrument
repairs. Pianos (Baldwin, Ivers &
Pond, Estey) and Organs (Baldwin,
Estey, Thomas) New and Used.
Terms.
MADDY MUSIC
508 E. William NO 3-3223
)XI
ALTERATIONS
Alterations, Dressmaking
Expertly done. Reasonable. NO 3-2389.
)P7
JOHN'S TAILOR SHOP
"The Clothing Stores' Tailor"
Alterations for Men and Women
Pressing While You Wait
118-1 E. Washington NO 2-4617
(above Conlin & Wetherbee Clothing
Store) )PO
CONVERT your double-breasted suit to
a new single-breasted model. $15.
Old style wide lapel single-breasted
coat into a new style narrow lapel
model. $11. Write to Michaels Tailor-
ing Co., 1425 Broadway, Detroit,
Michigan, for free details or phone
WO 3-5776. )Pl
USED CARS
FOR SALE
We specialize in good used cars from
$100 up. GENE'S AUTO SALES at
544 Detroit Street. NO 3-8141. )NI
52 DE SOTO V8. Radio, Heater, Power
Steering. Call NO 3-0831 after 5:00.
2016 Medford Road, Apt. 16. )N35
CHEVROLET 4 door sedan. Very good
transportation, available December 1,
$240. Call NO 5-6293 evenings. )N34
'58 Borgward .................$1915
'58 Volvo Demonstrator ......$2195
'57 TR-3 Triumph..........$2195
MICHIGAN
EUROPEAN CAR CORP.

RACCOON COAT: good condition. For
sale cheap. NO 3-7110 after 10:30 p.m.
1B72
DUO-THERM space heater, barrels, tub-
ing, etc. Good condition, reasonable.
Call NO 5-5145 mornings. )N4
1955 CREE MOBILE HOME on lot 8,
Orchard Grove. Completely modern.
Twin beds. Aluminum exterior, full
awning over patio. Excellent condi-
tion; immediate possession. Reason-
able. Contact W. A. Earl, 1028 Ad-
ministration Bldg., U of M, ext. 2834.
)B57
PIANOS - ORGANS
Best offer Keyboard Service
WURLITZER * SOHMER 0 KIMBALL
Dealer
ANN ARBOR PIANO CO.
213 E. Washington, NO 3-3109

ARMY-NAVY type
socks 39c; shorts
plies. Sam's Store,

FOREIGN CAR SERVICE
We service all makes and models
of Foreign and Sport Cars.
Lunication $1.25

514 E. Washington
Phone NO 3-4858

WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP
Bumping and Painting
2007 South State NO 2-3350
)S4
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly service is our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and , acces-
sories. Waranteed & guaranteed.
See us for the best price on new
& used tires, Road service -
mechanic on duty.
"You expect more from Standard
and you get it!"
1220 8. University at Forest
NO 8-9168 )Si

303 Ashley

NO 5-5800
)N31

~F~

Featuring:
Karastan
Mohawk
Needletuft
CARPET STORE-
207 E. Washington St.
- L I NOLEUM STORE -
205 N. Main St.

SNEAK
PREVIEW

81

Tonight 9 P.M.
MICHIGAN THEATRE

)J8

EDDIE'S PAINT STORE
White Paint.........$1.98 Per Gal.
Colors ................$2.48 Per Gal.
117 E. Ann NO 8-8966
)J77

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

- - - ed
Won der/aud
AT LOW
STU DENT
RATES
..awaits you at any of the
HILTON-STATLER
HOTELS
NEW YORK CITY:
The Statler Hilton
The Savoy Hilton
The Waldorf-Astoria
The Plaza
WASHINGTON, D. C.:
The Statler Hilton
BUFFALO:
The Statler Hilton
BOSTON:
The Statler Hilton
HARTFORD:

FOX MOTEL
Room Phones
Free TV
2805 E. Michigan HU 2-2204
)J8
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
POTATOES-U.S. No. 1 $3.00-100 lbs.
Bananas-15c lb. Demarco Produce.
NO 2-7747 )J95

English: MAN V
HISLU
Thit
give
thr
ingt
pee
the(
test
tob
a d
whi
English: BOASTFUL URCHIN
Thinklish: BRAGAMUFFIN
DONALD KNUDSEN. HARVARD
SPEAK THINKLISHI MAKE $2%
Just put two words together to form a ne
one. Thinklish is so easy you'll think of dozen
of new words in seconds! We'll pay $25 eac
for the hundreds of Thinklish words judge
best-and we'll feature many in our colleg
ads. Send your Thinklish words (with tran
lations) toLuckyStrike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon
N. Y. Enclose your name, address, college o
university and class.

WHO SQUANDERS En
JCKIES
Inklsh translation: When this gent
es someone the shirt off his back, he
ows in free laundry service. In pass-
around the cigarettes, he knows no
r'-it's "Want a Lucky, pal? Keep
carton!" The man's really a walking
imonial to the honest taste of fine
iacco (he buys 247 packs of Luckies
ay). Thing is, he gives 246 away-
Ch makes him a bit of a tastrel!
English: BLUE-BLOOD 'HOUSE PET
Thinklish: ARISTDCAT
EDWARD SULlUVAN, C.C N.Y
English: SHOT-PUTTING AWARD

_ .

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