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June 27, 1964 - Image 3

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Michigan Daily, 1964-06-27

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I

SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1964

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE THREE

___NEXT WEEK'S EVENTS

It's 'Tri-Term' from Now On

v

(Continued from Page 1)

MONDAY
8:30 a.m. - Professors George
Odiorne, Robert House and James
Bulloch of the business adminis-
tration school, will outline "Man-
agement Objectives - Results
Oriented Appraisals Systems" at
the business administration school.
4 p.m.-Prof. Arthur J. Carr of
the English department will speak
on "The Question of Asking Ques-
tions" in Aud. C. His speech will
be another in a series "Toward
the Better Teaching of High
School English.''
4:15 p.m.-Robert Glasgow, or-
ganist, will give a recital for the
"School of Music Conference on
Organ Music in Hill Aud.
TUESDAY
8:30 a.m. - Professors George
Odiorne, Robert House and James
Bulloch of the business adminis-
tration school will conclude their
series on "Management by Ob-
jectives - Results-Oriented Ap-
praisals Systems."
1:30 p.m.-Rudolp Schoch will
speak on "The Use of the Recorder
-Teaching Music in the Swiss
Schools" at the recital hall of the
music school.
8:30 p.m.-Jerome Jelinek, cello-
ist and Rhea Kish, pianist, will
give a recital in Rackham Lec-
ture Hall.
WEDNESDAY
4:10 p.m. - Luther H. Foster,
president of the Tuskegee Insti-
tute, will discuss "The American
Negro in Transition, 1964: An
Overview" in Aud. A. This is the
first in a series of special sum-
mer session lectures on the Ne-
gro.

Works by Purcell, Parcham,
Bull, Handel, Stanley and Boyce
will be performed.
8:30 p.m.-Prof. Gyorgy Sandor
of the music school will open the
University Musical Society's Sum-
mer Concert Series in Rackham
Aud.
FRIDAY
7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild
will present Charlie Chaplin in
"The Kid"; John Bunny in "A
Cure for Pokeritis"; Laurel and
Hardy in "Battle of the Century,"
and Carole Lombard in "Campus
Vamp" at the Architecture Aud.
OTHER EVENTS
An exhibition selected from the
works of Japan's leading callig-
raphers, Ando, Hirano, Matsui,
Miyamoto, Nishikawa among oth-
ers, will be on display at the
Museum of Art in Alumni Memor-
ial Hall through Aug. 16.

The epidemiology department
of the public health school is pre-
senting a series of lectures on
"Immunity and Hypersensitivity"
by H. Sherwood Lawrence of New
York University in Room 3042,
public health school. Here is his
schedule:
Monday 4 p.m. - Lecture:
"Transfer Factor in Delayed-
Type Hypersensitivity."
Tuesday, 1 p.m.-Lecture: Rela-
tions Between Delayed-Type Hy-
persensitivity, Immunity and Dis-
ease."
2:30-4 p.m.-Round-table dis-
cussion of "Delayed-Type Hyper-
sensitivity."
Wednesday, 4 p.m. - Lecture:
"Homograft Reactions in Man."
Thursday, 1 p.m. - Lecture:
"Mechanisms of Autoimmune Dis-
eases."
2:30-4 p.m.-Round-table ds.
cussion of "Homograft Reactions
and Autoimmune Diseases."

Spurr said that Edward Groes-
beck, director of registration and
records, will handle the correc-
tions.
The Daily will also include the1
official tri-term calendar (see
chart) in its freshman edition
which is sent to all-incoming stu-
dents and distributed on campus.
With these bugs worked out,
the prospects for trimester are ex-
cellent, its proponents say. The
token trimester schedule last year
did help in one way : it tested the
14-week schedule and shortened
exam period of the tri-term plan.
Little Suffering
No one seemed to suffer-ex-
cept possibly student organiza-
tions. Surveys showed that high
percentages of students and teach-
ers found no harsh difficulties in
the transition. Ninety per cent of
the upperclassmen responding to
a Daily survey indicated their ap-
proval for tri-term over the old
schedule.
A surprisingly high number of
respondents in another survey in-

dicated their intentions to attend
the full-scale summer sessions.
Enrollment will jump from 14,0001
this session to over 16,000 students
next summer, officials predict. 1
Spurr accounts for these suc-
cesses as a result of the gradual
transition made over the past few
years. "We haven't moved to full-
scale operations overnight," he ob-
serves.
In June of 1958, a University
calendar study committee saw the'
need for further appraisal of tri-

term. It wasn't until an investi-
gating faculty group-chaired by
Literary College Dean William
Haber - recommended the move
that the Regents were sold. They
endorsed in principle the sweep-
ing calendar revision at their June
meeting in 1961.
Only the Legislature prevented
tri-term's appearance in the fall
of 1963. For 1964, all that remains
is to hang onto the one name-
and let the students know that
"three term year-round opera-
tions" is here for real.

This Is the Real Thing
Fall Term .. .

PROF. ARTHUR CARR

7:30 p.m.--Athur Burks of the
philosophy department will speak
about "Philosophy and Language"
in the Rackham Amphitheatre.
His speech will be the first in a
linguistics department forum lec-
ture series.
THURSDAY
7:30 p.m.-Einar Haugen will
speak on "Diglossia in Modern
Norway" in the Rackham Amphi-
treatre. Second in the linguistics
department forum lecture series.
8:30 p.m.-The Baroque Trio
(Nelson Hauenstein, flute; Florian
Mueller, oboe; Marilyn Mason,
harpsichord, assisted by Lawrence
Hurst, double bass) will give a
program in Rackham Lecture
Hall.

PROF. GYORGY SANDOR

"' :s~v a,°. t". r . {v:frr:.,.,.,..,.,..., sd{"1.....a .. .:.n::..3...":4' .. r. . X".v ..* ........... . ."..".: . . . . . . . '

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editorial
responsibility. Notices should be sent
in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room
3564 Administration Building before
2 p.m. of the day preceding publica-
tion, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satur-
day and Sunday.
SATURDAY, JUNE 27
Day Calendar
School of Music Conference on Or-
gan Music, Degree Recital - Edward
Tibbs, Organist: Hill Aud.: 8:30 p.m.
Cinema Guild-Mabel Normand in
'tMckey"; Charlie Chase in "Stolen
Goods", Charlie Chaplin in "A Wom-
an": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m.
University Players, Dept. of Speech
Production-Alan Jay Lerner and Fred-
eric Loewe's "My Fair Lady"; Lydia
Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m.
SUNDAY, JUNE 28
School of Music Conference on Or-
gan Music Recital-Students and Alum-
ni of the University of Michigan, "The
Music of DuruflV": Hill Aud., 4:15 p.m.
I.'

i

NOON LUNCHEON BOOK DISCUSSIONS

School of Music Conference on Or-J. Brown for morning in Bureau of
gan Music Recital-Maurice Durufl6, Or- Appts., in afternoon at Bus. Ad. Feb.,
ganiste, St. Etienne-du-Mont, Paris, May & Aug. grads. U.S. citizenship.
Professeur au Conservatoire National THURS., JULY 2-
de Paris and Marie-Madeleine Durufle-

On Contemporary Literature

"THE VISION OF HELL IN MODERN LITERATURE"
Mr. David W.K. Sumner,
eaching Fellow, Department of English
Monday, June 29, 2nd Floor Terrace
'NEW MEANINGS FOR NEW BEINGS: THE LANGUAGE OF FAITH
FOR A WORLD COME OF AGE"
Mr. John Koenig, Theological Intern, University Lutheran Chapel
Tuesday, July 7, Anderson Room
"HEMINGWAY'S A MOVEABLE FEAST"
Professor Arthur Carr, Department of English
Tuesday, July 14, Anderson Room
"THE FEMININE MYSTIQUE: A CLUE TO IDENTITY CRISES"
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Sumner, Program Assistant,
Office of Religious Affairs
Tuesday, July 21, Anderson Room
"HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY: A GROWING THIRD FORCE"
(a discussion of the works of Allport, Maslow, Jung & May)
Mr. David M. Wulff, Research Assistant,
Research Center for Group Dynamics
Tuesday, July 28, Anderson Room

Chevalier: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m.
Conference on Aging - Registration,
Michigan Union, 4 p.m.
General Notices
A Few More Ushers are needed for
the Series of Piano Concerts to be
given in Rackham Aud. during the
month of July. Please call Mr. Warner
at NO 8-8597 if you are interested in
ushering. This request is not for stu-
dents alone. Anyone is eligible.
Placement
ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER-
VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please
sign interview schedules posted at 128-H
West Engrg. for appointments with the
following:
JUNE 30-
Scott Paper Co., Mfg. Engnrs. (Plants
in N., N.E., Mid-West, Deep South,
Mid-Atlantic, Staff: Cor. Phila. Hdqts.
-All Degrees: ME. MS-JhD: Instrumen-
tation. BS-MS: EE, EM & IE. Aug.
grads. R. & D., Des., Prod
JULY 1-
General Motors Corp., Primarily Mid-
west-BS-MS: EE, IE & ME. BS: Sci.
Enge. Aug. grads. R. & D., Des. &
Prod.
Maxon Premier Burner Co., Inc.,
Muncie, Ind.-BS-MS: ME. BS: ChE,
EE, EM, IE & Met. Aug. & Dec. grads.
H. & D., Prod., & Sales.
JULY 2--
Corning Glass Works, Albion, Mich.-
Mfg. Plant, Corning, N.Y.-Staff Engnr.
-All Degrees: ChE, EE, EM, IE, Instru.,
Mat'ls., ME, Met. BS: S. Engrg. Aug.
& Dec. grads. R. & D., Des., Prod. &
Process.
McDonnel Aircraft Corp., Entire
Corp.-All Degrees: AE & Astro., CE,
EE, EM, IE, Instru., Commun. Scl., ME.
Prof.: Applied Mech. MS-PhD: Mat'ls.,
Met. PhD: Nuclear. BS: E Math & E
Physics. Aug. grads. R. & D., Des., Prod.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau of
Appointments-Seniors & grad students,
please call Ext. 3544 for appointments
with thefollowing:
WED., JULY I-
General Dynamics Corporate Office,
New York, N.Y.-Will be interviewing
MEN only for their Management Train-
ing Program. Degree majors in Econ.,
Poli. Sci., History, & General Liberal
Arts. Make appointments with Thomas
A GEM FROM TODD'S
PRIVATE COLLECTION
THE DATE BOOK SLACK
16.98
From our private
collection comes o rare
gem. A creation of our
designers and tailored
to our exacting specifico
tions by Gaslight. Waist
band hoards your little
block book (it's yours
FREE with slacks). Slit
dropped pockets in front.
Smort iridescent shades
of shorkskin. Trim and
slim, in fact the slimmest
ever. Yes, everything
is rare but the price
it's a modest 6598
1209 S. UNIVERSITY

Central Intelligence Agency, Washing-
ton,rD.C.-Men & Women. JohnFor-
rester will be interviewing all day at
the Bureau of Appts. Seeking degrees
in Econ. only. BA & MA level. Posi-
tions: Economists.
THURS., JULY 9-
General Foods Corp., White Plains,
N.Y.-Seeking MEN, May & Aug. grads
(p.m. only). BA or MA or BBA. Psych.,
Ind. Rels. or anyone interested in
Personnel work. Positions: Personnel
Admin. Trainee Program.
POSITION OPENINGS:
Friden, Inc., San Leandro, Calif. -
Seeking Sales Rep. for opening in Ann
Arbor area. Sales of desk calculators,
adding machines, mailing equipment,
etc. Will start as Junior Salesman &
occasionally make calls within 21%z
county area. Also data processing equip-
ment. College grad-any field. Exper.
not essential but must be interested
in sales as a career. Recent grad. Must
have car.
City of Flint, Mich.-Sr. Civil Engnr.
Degree in CE. 3 yrs, exper. in design
& construction of engrg. projects,
pref. including some supv. work.
Abbott Labs., Chicago, Il.-Many &
various openings including: Microbiol-
ogist, Medical Writer, Res. Biochemist,
Field Res. Investigator, Dev. Biochem-
ist, Res. Pharmacist, Liaison chemist,
Dev. Engnr., Info. Scientist, Scientific
Reis. Rep., Chemical Analyst, Physical
Chemist, ChE, Stat. Quality Control, Fi-
nancial Trainee, Financial Analyst, Tax
Accountant, Credit Analyst, Mgr. of
Computer Systems, Admin. Trainee,
Sales Stat., Staff Ace't., etc.
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Peace Corp.-Will visit the U. of M.
July 6-11. They will have information

centers in the Lower Lobby of the
Mich. Union and on the Diagonal.
Make appointments with representa-
tives for placement test.
Agency for International Develop-
ment-Need secretaries to serve over-
seas in the foreign aid prog. An AID
rep. will be in Detroit for 2 weeks,
conducting interviews from Mon., June
22 through Thurs., July 2. Miss Doro-
thy Boulos will interview at the Michi-
gan State Employment Service office,
1145 Griswold St., 9th floor, Detroit,
weekdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Group
interviews will be held Wed, evening,
July 1. Aptps. may be made by phoning
Miss Boulos at 222-1855. Open to wom-
en with secretarial exper. & good short-
hand & typing. Must be single, high sch.
graduate, at least 21 yrs., U.S. citizen-
ship. Appts. are for 2 yrs. Positions
also avail. at Wash., D.C. hdqts with
min age here of 18.
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN-
NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially
recognized and registered organiza-
tions only. Organizations who are plan-
ning to be active for the Summer
Term should be registered by July 3,
1964. Forms available, 1011 Sturent Ac-
tivities Bldg.
** *
University Lutheran Chapel, Bible
Class: Obedience and Pride: The Fall,
9:15 a.m.; Sunday Service, sermon: "A
Lesson in Forgiveness," 10:30 a.m.; Sup-
per and Program, "The Ministry of
the Laymen," 6 p.m., June 28, 1511
Washtenaw Ave.
Graduate Outing Club, Swiming and/
or hiking, June 28, 1:45 p.m., Rackham,
Huron St. entrance.

DWARFING THE

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UI 11111

Orientation begins
Registration begins
Classes begin
Labor Day (holiday)
Thanksgiving recess 5 p.m.
Classes resume
Classes end
Study day
Examinations begin
Examinations end
Graduation
Winter Term. .
Orientation-begins
Registration begins
Classes begin
Recess begins 5 p.m.
Classes resume
Classes end
Study day
Examinations begin
Examinations end
Commencement
Easter Sunday
Spring Term . .
Orientation-Registration
Classes begin
Memorial Day (holiday)
Spring half-term ends
Summer half-term begins
July 4th (holiday)
Summer half-term ends
DIAL 3 . ..E .
6264+

Josephg.LLevine presents
-y-A Stanley Baker-
Cy Endfield Production
TECHNICOLOR'
..t, .*M.s TECHNIRAMA'
NEXT: "THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN"

me...........

Shows Start at
1:15-3:44-6:15 & 8:50

Mon. Aug. 24
Wed. Aug. 26
Mon. Aug. 31
Mon. Sept. 7
Wed. Nov. 25
Mon. Nov. 30
Tues. Dec. 14
Tues. Dec. 15
Wed. Dec. 16
Tues. Dec. 22
Sat. Dec. 19
Mon. Jan. 4
Mon. Jan. 4
Thurs. Jan. 7
Thurs. Mar. 4
Mon. Mar. 8
Sat. Apr. 17
Mon. Apr. 19
Tues. Apr. 20
Tues. Apr. 27
Sat. May 1
Sun. Apr. 18
Mon. May 3
Wed. May 5
Mon. May 31
Sat. June 26
Mon. June 28
Mon. July 5
Wed. Aug. 18

I

Rent a TV this Summer
NEW 19" G.E. PORTABLES
only $10.00 per month
FREE DELIVERY & SERVICE
TV set on display at Follett's Bookstore
Call NEJAC TV 4entaI4
phone: NO 2-5671

I

DIAL
8-6416

, -ra A b
4* 117 IITTVM

Continuous
From 1-P.M.
Sati. & Sun.

* ENDING TONIGHT

Alfred Hitchcock's
'Trouble With Harry"

SGregory Peck
Audrey Hepburn
"Romain Holiday"

and

STARTING SUNDAY

PFAMMMBWBM

I

I

12:00 NOON

MICHIGAN UNION

Luncheon 50c (for first 25 students only)
Barbecued Hamburger on bun, fruit, milk or coffee
Sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs,
The University of Michigan
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME

presented by
THE UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY
Summer Concert Seriei
FOUR PIANO RECITALS
In RACKHAM AUDITORIUM
GYORGY SANDOR-Thurs., July 2, 8:30
Fantasy & Fugue in G minor ...................Bach-Liszt
Fantasy, Op. 17 .....................Schumonn
Fantasia quasi Sonata (Apres une Lecture de Dante) . . . . Liszt
Fantasy in F minor, Op. 49 ...:................... Chopin
Variations on a Theme by Paganini................ .Brahms
DANIEL BARENDOIM-Tues., July 7, 8:30
Young Israeli Pianist

The I.Athut Rsnli
p Orgpnirsts" ipresents

T C A MAN
10 WOMAN WOULD
dTOOCN

11

AND

21

i

11
Week Way Matinees 75c
Nights & Sunday $1.00

3 SHOWS DAILY AT
2 P.M. 5 P.M. 8 P.M.
(Continuous Performances)
A TOWERIN
A..:EADVENTURE
TRIUMPH!
I Winner of 27

Coming Thursday.:-"HUD"-Starts Thursday
~y
II4
N~ r

'I
'I
.1
'I
.1
'I
4
4

Sonata in
Sonata in
Sonata in

E-flat Major, Op. 81a ("Les Adieux") . . . . Beethoven
F minor, Op. 57 ("Apassionata").........Beethoven
C minor, Op. 111 .:.................. Beethoven

EUGENE ISTOMIN-Sot., July 20, 8:30
Sonata in A major ....................... .....Haydn
Sonata in C major, Op. 53 "Waldstein"..........Beethoven
Sonata in Three Movements................ .. Stravinsky
Variations on a Theme by Handel, Op. 24 ............Brahms
RALPH VOTAPEK-Mon., July 29, 8:30

International Awards...

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