THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday,, January 19, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 19, 1969 i I entral Student Juici ary (formerly Joint Judiciary Council) Announces Open Petitioning for FIVE SEATS Sign up for interviews at SGC offices 1st floor. SAB Petitions due Tuesday, January 21, 5:00 P.M. i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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 form to Room 3528' LSA Bldg. before 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maximum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only, Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. SUNDAY, JANUARY 19 fDay Calendar Degree Recital - Philip Mason: Vio- lin; School of Music Recital Hall, 4:30 p.m. Recital - John McCollum, Tenor- Eugene Bossart, Piano; Rackham Lec- ture Hail, 4:30 p.m. Cinema Guild: Antonioni's Eclipse: Architecture Auditorium, 7:00 and 9:05 fp.m. Degree Recital: Douglas Reed, Or- School of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. gan: Hill Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. Lecture: Benjamin Lees, G u e ast Composer, "Benjamin Lees Looks At Glces His Music": School of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. Broadcasting Service: WUOM R a d i o _______(91.7 Mc.) 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. ' MONDAY EVENTS 12 Noon to 11 p.m. Saturday, 12 Noon ______ to 6 p.m. Sunday. Michigan Pastors' Conference: Regis- Sunday 2:00 p.m. The -Cleveland tration: Lobby, Rackham Building, Orchestra, Martin Turnovsky conduct- 8:00 a .m. ing. Dvorak, Martinu, Beethoven. Sun-? The U-M Senate Assembly, 3:15 p.m. day 4:00 p.m. Ernest Bloch: The Man at Rackham Amphitheater, agenda: 1. and His Music. Violin Sonatas Nos. 1l Consideration of the minutes of the and 2. December 16 meeting; 2. Announce- Monday 11:00 a.m. The Eleventh ments & Communications; 3. Com-n Hour (repeated at 7 p.m.) Ed Burrows mittees: a. Resolution from Research hosts an hour of news and conversa- Policies Committee, re student mem- tion about the arts and literature, bership; b. Replacement for Professors Guest:bJazz authority Father O'Con Sparrow and Yamagiwa on the Classi- nor. fied Research Committee; c. Recoin- Monday 1:00 p.m. The United .States' mendation concerning an "Appeals In A Revolutionary World: Part 3 of Committee"; 4. Old business; 5. New 4, Manfred Halpern and Norman Gall Business. Princeton; Nathan Leites, University Department of Engineering Mechan- of Chicago; Michael Walser, Harvard. is Seminar: Henry N. Pollack, Assoc- and Susan Sontag, author, on "Re- late Professor of Geology, "Large volution and Definitions". From Earthquakesand Globa~l Dynamics", Princeton University. Monday 5:00 p.m., 311 West Engineering Building, 400Michigan Calendar - area events.r5:15? 31p etEnierngBidng. p.m. Law In The News, with P r o f. Computer Lectures: Brice Carnahan, Joseph R. Julin. Monday 8:05 p.m. Associate Professor of Chemical En- Music From Rochester, featuring the gineering and Biostatistics, "An Intro- Eastman Opera Theatre in a slightly duction to Digital Computers": Natural abridged version of Domenico Cima- iScience Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. rosa's opera "The Secret Marriage". ScRecitalu Brbr Nissman Piano:' Ra Center for Russian and East Euro- pean Studies: lecture by Ivan Svitak, Institute of Philosophy, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences and Research In- stitute on Communist Affairs, Colum- bia University: "The Czechoslovak Tra- gedy", Auditorium D, Angell Hall, 4:10 . p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 21. National Steel Corporation, Detroit,. Mich., Portage Indiana, Weirton, West Va. B&M math for operations research and systems analysis. U. S. Public Health Service, V. D. ,program, Detroit, Mich., and nation- wide. B Arch., Econ., Engl., For. Lang- uages, Gen. Lib. Arts. Geog., Geol., Hist.. Journ., Math., Philo., Poli. Sci.. Psych., Public Health, Speech, Soc. and Soc. Ek. for Public Administration TUESDAY, JANUARY 28 Procter and Gamble, Market Re- searchuCincinnati, Ohio., travel throughout U.S., All degrees at bach- elors level for market research. U.S. Public Health Service, see Mon- day listing. Hiekel near approval in cabinet talks Vote set tomorrow: Other posts official with inauguration Subscribe to The Michigan Daily UN ION-LEAGUE ANNO UNCES I I I I PETITIONING FOR THE CHAIRMAN 1969 SUMMER BLUES FESTIVAL WELCOME SUNDAY A completely new midwest festival 10:30 A.M. Dealing with the Demonic CALVIN MALEFYT, Ph.D. Petitions can be picked up at the UAC offices, 2nd floor Michigan Union PETITIONS ARE DUE JANUARY 26 SPEAKING: 7:00 p.m., Lay Leadership FRANKLIN LITTELL, Ph.D. President, Iowa Wesleyan College The make-up exam for Philosophy 363 will be given Wed., Jan. 22 from 4-6 p.m. for all students with excused absences from the Fall final. If you have not been contacted concerning the final, please call Leslie Pickering, 764-, 6285. The Zoology Seminar will present a lecture on Wed., Jan. 22 by Dr. Mar- tin Michner of the Shintron Company on "Pigeon Homing: Pursuit by Plane and Radio", 4:00 p.m., 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Spanish Lecture: Dr. Fritz Schalk, Professor of Romance Languages at the University of Cologne, Tuesday, January 21, at 8 p.m., in the West Con- ference Room of the Rackham Valild-' ing, on the subject: "Don Quijote en la Cueva de Montesinos". Doctoral Examinations Doctoral Examination for: Kojiro Nishina, Nuclear Engineering, Disserta- tion: Energy-Dependent Diffusion Theory Treatment of Neutron W a v e Propagation in a Finite Medium," on Monday, January 20 at 3 p.m. in 2042 Phoenix Memorial Lab., Chairman: Z. Akcasu. Placement PLACEMENT 3200 S.A.B. Placement Interviews: The following organizations will interview at Place- ment Services, the representatives ex- pect to see at least a vita sheet on in- terviewees, therefore, if you are not already registered with the General Division, please stop in and let us pro- vide you with the proper materials. Please call 763-1363 to make appoint- ments by phone, or stop in and make appt. in person. Make appts. as soon as possible, none accepted after 4 p.m. day preceding visit. MONDAY, JANUARY 27 Burroughs Corporation, Jackson, Mich. afternoon only. All majors and degree levels for inside and territorial sales { nationwide. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29 WASHINGTON (A) - Eleven of Bell System, Detroit, Mich. and na- President-elect Nixon's 12 Cabi- tionwide. B and M in Chem., Econ., net nominees apparently will be Gen. Lib. Arts. Math., Physics, B only confirme wfl fe hi he in Engl., Hist.. Poll. Sci., and Psych med swiftly after their chief for Data Processing, Mgmt. Trng., is inaugurated Monday but Walter Production, Purchasing and Sales. J. Hickel may wait until Tuesday The B. F. Goodrich Company, Akron, for his job as secretary of the in- Ohio and all locations. All degrees at tenor. B or M level for Mgmt., Trng., Mktg, RNs., Personnel., inside and territ. Chairman Henry M. Jackson, sales. (D-Wash), of the Senate Interior U.S. Public Heath Service, see Mon- Committee, said yesterday his day listing, panel will not vote on the Alaska THURSDAY, JANUARY 30 governor's appointment until to- Manufacturers Bank, Detroit a n d morrow morning. And he added metropolitan Mich. B in Gen. Lib. Arts, that he understands .two senators and Math, B&M in Econ. for Banking, Data Processing and Mgmt. Trng. will not agree to waive the requir- National Life of Vermont, Detroit, ed 24-hour waiting period after Mich.: B and M Econ., Engl., Library the committee recommends Sen- Sci., Psych and Speech for Insuraice,at Sales. ate confirmation. There appears no doubt that the FRIDAY, JANUARY 31 49-year-old self-made millionaire Brunswick Corporation, Nationwide, will receive committee approval B Gen. Lib. Arts, .Math, Psych, and aWd Sene co mion. But the masters in Chem for Data Processing, and Senate confirmation. But the Personnel. Territorial Sales. delay underscores the fact that he Uniyersity of Rochester, Personnel, is the only one of the 12 appointe- Rochester, N.Y. B Biochem., Anal. es who has undergone prolonged ches., G Chen.,hMrobiol. Pham., and sometimes critical question- Soc. Wk. and MALS degrees for ol- ing in hearings running for an un- ogy, Library work, Secretarial, Soc. Wk., usual four days. Health careers in Med. Ctr. The r e s t of Republican Nix- SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE on's choices have had generally 212 S.A.B., Lower Level: clear sailing before the various Notice to All Students: The n e x t examining committees controlled examination for summer positions with by Democrats. Nixon is expected the Peder. .'al Government will be held to submit their nominations form over appgications araturday,nary ally as his first major action after 30, you must state on the application his midday swearing-in Committee that you wish to take the exam where reports and Senate confirmations you will be during that weekend, home, or here, or anywhere, but this are expected to follow in a matter information must be on the annlica- of hours under unanimous con- tion. Pick up Applications at S.P.S. sent waiver of the waiting period. ENGINEERING After three days of public PLACEMENT SERVICE hearings which produced criticism 128 ;H, West Engrg. Bldg. of Hickel's views on conservation, Engineering Placement Meeting: No. Jackson's committee w e n t into 3. "Employment Interviewing and Plant closed session yesterday to con- visits." What to expect. and how to sider his personal finances. This act during employment negotiations. Third of four meetings. Professor J. G. was interrupted for public testi- Young. January 20, 1969, 4:00 p.m. and mony on his connections with oil 7:30 p.m. in Room 325, West Engineer- and gas leases. Then the executive ing Building. (Afternoon and eveninghern waesmd. meetings will be the same.) hearing was resumed. Engineering Placement Meeting: No. After the final session, Jackson 4. "Success on the job." Common dif- told newsmen Hickel has agreed to ficulties of transition from school to dispose of more than $1 million in work and how to avoid them. Fourth of sokitrsswihmgthv four meetings. Professor J. G. Young. stock Interests which might have January 21, 1969, 4:00 p.m. and 7:30 even "the appearance of potential p.m. In Room 325, West Engineering conflicts of interest" with his du- Building. (Afternoon and evening ties as secretary. meetings will be the same.) Hickel told the committee also Organizational Notice that h° would advise the manag- ers of his other interests in Alas- American Institute of Industrial En- ka to avoid doing any business gineers weekly luncheon, Tuesday, Jan- with the federal government. uary 21, at 12 noon, Room 229 West Jackson described these o tih e r Engineers. Speaker: W. J. Hatch from Deere and Company, Moline, Illinois, holdings as being in construction, "How to Land the Job You Want." shopping centers and hotels. 4' *1 a L: AT CHECKMATE... A GREAT STOREWIDE i7l, (LEARANCE THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO BUY FINE QUALITY MEN'S APPAREL AT A MONEY-SAVING PRICE :?, :{r: :} ;.,aan.^;.-:iY..;.}}}ti;.}Y..<:?? s:::{':"R"?t\+ :m: : .u:iL: {.:4}:t}Y:L-:tti^.v,.ss{?".: f.-:.'{8F.{-Yi?.-- 5 '.{: {{?:.:'.:.};.;an<.rf."i:v fi"'.}'t ?:"i:?r'.. Y :"...... .. f. .:....-v.v::::::; 4 \ S {'{.-1+:v :-'- -r:^: is s{'!. .........: i::i-.r. :": :::: r:. : ::: rn .... .i?'vii: i ..iiii: is i .............it :::i.C:ii:::i}:iii: ...n ......4 ......\...4...... .}.... .. v.......-...:'ryiT'.ii ":ivi:i:::?:ii .... ..; -.. ....-5-: v:::-ii:^:v'tCl:i::.i: 4 ... r .: ..:::::::::. :::: : }:i iy:i is::. "::.::.: t iiii:-: ii:4:.:.. v-:......- v ...... .. .....:.:::::: ...... }..... n ........ i'. ':v. ........ -. . .... tii ;ir 4'i:.:: v. j: .}.iiii tJ.. 1 .:wv.:'d};y?:i i2C{t{ 41'{h'iNhU:Ji ".iA4v i4:ii i4'k-'-w.vvh % i'N:iiviS:}': -:?"'i'LJ .... ' Yaa:.., :-..+i.....n:i?.ti.:{kiii::: ." .:W.cku se.Gid:aL& '- ..; :.::.\ W...w}:iu53. ur.4Gt$+4e5dt' CiriS$:b ' I : > :, ' b> : : .£ '(_?::i4 :: ?>"" F >: ';:;} .'. '' +l:ry iiv}} : ):;$: :':lti> $, '-'t' % y. { f ''? ; #: ,, ?'ti' :;"'t> wa ,st+f d{: r AUDITIONS for the winter term operetta production IOLANTHE U-M Gilbert and Sullivan Society SUNDAY, JANUARY 19, 1-11 P.M. MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 7-1 1 P.M. Michigan Union SINGERS-ACTORS' $ 8 '38 $ Room 3A Reg. $45 Reg. $55 Reg. $65 .:. . . ..y.......:..... ..x. .. ., .. .,.. ,.. ., .f...r . .:L....: ..+;"; ... ?.= >::,;{rz..?:.>n ,:.:.. w ?'":-:";. . . .. .. ..... ... .:.c? :. ::. . : t vN' Lvi''w4S .Y{GGv {I..G.4 t{i bb..th' i = : _.. , . . I VAN BOVEN Semi-Annual Reg. $55 $ 8 Reg. $65 $A 8 vii SALE PERMANENT PRESS SLACKS R $588 2or$11 Fine Quality WOOL SLACKS Reg.$99 $22.95 to $29.95 Fine Clothing and Furnishings at Reductions of 4 20% or more PERMANENT PRESS SHIRTS SWEATERS Men's Shoe Sale Is Concurrent At This Time Reg. $7-$8.50 $488 3 for Reg. to $19.95 $10 All items for this sale are from our regular stock. They represent excellent values and are reduced for I I t-Mic~k c£leiranceP