THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THE MICHIGAN DAILYPAGE THREE 'U' Public Health School Receives Nutrition Grant Prof. HayesTo Head UN Day - i man of Michigan's United Nations day. October 24 will be observed throughout the nation as UN day. It is organized in conjunction with the American Association for the United Nations. The day has been observed annually for some time. Prof. Hayes will work with Mrs. Miriam A. Hewlett of Detroit in planning the day's events. He said no specific plans have been pre- pared as yet. In the past, UN days have fea- tured luncheons and speakers for the UN association chapters, as well as a program of public in. formation. Gov. Swainson said, "The an- nual celebration of UN day gives us an opportunity to rededicate ourselves to the cause of freedom and understanding. "It is my hope that through our UN day program in Michigan we can rally support and understand- ing for the organization which more than any other represents man's hope for troubled times tension.'' survival in these of international The public health school has received a five-year training grant to set up an advanced program in nutrition. The United States Public Health Service is providing annual sup- port in amounts up to $53,370. The initial $48,778 grant has been approved. u Carillonneur Sets Program For Recital ' Sidney F. Giles, assistant caril- lonneur will play the last in the summer series of recitals at 7:15 p.m. tonight.-. Compositions for carillon will include "Prelude" by Staf Nees, "Chacone" by Auguste Durand, "Menuet" by M. Baustetter and "Sonata" by Prof. F. Percival, Price, regular University carillon- neur. The program will also in- clude "Gavotte" by C. W. von Gluck, "Pizzicato" by Leo Delibes, "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice" by C. Saint-Saens and "Turkish March" by Mozart. Prepare Proposal The grant resulted from a pro- posal prepared for the Public Health Service by Dean Myron E.a Wegman and Prof. Adelia Beeu- wkes of the public health school. With the federal support, the University will expand its teach- ing of nutrition. Miss Beeuwkes said the grant would enable the public health school to accept a greater number of graduate stu- dents in that area. To Open Courses Further, nutrition courses will be made available to all students entering public health work. There are also the possibilities of even- tually offering a doctoral degree in public health nutrition and of arranging additional courses in this area suited to the needs of such specialists as dentists, doc- tors and nurses. In commenting on the new grant, Miss Beeuwkes said, "Nu- trition continues to be one of the most serious problems in the world today. In the United States we need to step up community-wide nutrition education to aid in the control of chronic diseases, care for the aged, rehabilitation and to protect the quality and safety of processed foods." Prof. Uhienbeck To Deliver Talk Prof. E. M. Uhlenbeck of the Royal University of the Nether- lands will discuss "Some First Principles of the Study of Syn- tax" at 7:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The talk is part of the Lin- guistics Forum series. Alumni Plan Family Trip To Peliston The Alumni Association is plan- ning an alumni family campingt trip in two one week sessions at the University's biological station at Lake Douglas in Pellston. The first such venture, the out- ing is designed to accommodate1 50 families each week for an ex- pected total of about 200 persons. Available activities will include superviser crafts, swimming les- sons, campfire activities for young- er children and planned activities for teen-aged campers. In addi- tion, arrangements have been' made to include sports facilities, as well as fishing, hiking and boat- ing. Lake Douglas is located 315 miles north of Detroit and 18 miles south of Mackinac City and the bridge. It has been a University summer biological camp and wild- life preserve since 1909. Faculty members who will be participating are Prof. Arthur Eastman of the English depart- ment, Prof. Nicholas Kazarinoff of the mathematics department, Prof. Wilbur Nelson of the engi- neering school and Prof. Samuel Estep of the law school. The first group will stay Aug. 21 to 28 and the second from Aug. 28 to Sept. 4. WASHINGTON (R) - The De- fense Department expects its Civil Defense program to provide radiation fallout protection for 50 million people by December, 1962. That prediction was given yes- terday by Adam Yarmolinsky, special assistant to the Secretary of Defense, in an address to con- struction experts of the Army and Navy. Yarmolinsky estimated that people not directly affected by the blast would have from 30 minutes to as much as 16 hours to go into fallout shelters following an at- Spanish Club ToN Give Play The Spanish Club will present a one act comedy in Spanish to- night at 8 p.m. in Rm. 3050 of the Frieze Building. "El Ajedrez del Diablo" (The Devil's Chess Game) by Pedro Sa- linas deals with a chess playing "provincial devil" who becomes in- volved in a family affair in at- tempting to play a chess game with a master. tack. He explained that this is the time in which radioactive par- ticals might be carried to areas from a nuclear explosion. The fallout shelters will provide no protection against the direct effect of blast. On the general subject of shel- ters, Sen. Stephen M. Young told the Senate that six of seven "Civil Defense boondogglers in the Washington area" wouldn't spend the money to build for themselves the sort of private shelters they are urging other Americans to build. He pinned his speech on pub- lished reports that six of seven paid local officials of the program haven't built shelters for their families. Armytage To Talk On British Schools Prof. W. H. G. Armytage of the education school of the University of Sheffield, England, will discuss "Coordination and Autonomy in British Universities" today at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. B. The lecture is sponsored by the Summer Session. CIVIL DEFENSE: Defense Department Cites Fallout Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... M.l . .J. t.J .r .F...1 . r1. . }. ...: ...... ...........:...... .r}f{.r " .. r..... .... .... ...... t........:.... ..... .... . . . ... . . .av . ..n..n. a.. ...., a. ...r.s..r................ ......... .. . .... ....a. . . ...... .r .........r.. .. .n ..'v......... . Y.... :.. ..Y...... i. 4.a. I 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 3519 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. THURSDAY, AUGUST 10 General Notices Attention August Graduates: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, TONIGHT.. performances continue THE MARRIAGE of FIGARO 8:00 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre MOZART'S GREAT COMIC OPERA. in English! They have such beautiful - -1 - a and in hard-to-find sizes, too from tiny 7's to taller 44's, shorter 121 e - 26 -- and the V2 yr. 1/2price Clearance has wonderful Buys- in c-a-o-l Dresses - that were originally 14.95 to 49.95. School of Public Health, School of Business Administration: Students are advised not to request grades of I or X in August. When such grades are abso- lutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your instruc- tor to report the make-up grade not later than 11 a.m. August 23. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Recommendations for Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recommend tentative August gradu- ates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, for honors or high honors should recommend such students by forwarding a letter (in two copies; one copy for Honors Coun- cil, one copy for the Office of Regis- tration and Records) to the Director, Honors Council,, 1210 Angell Hall, by 4-p.m. Tues., Aug. 22. Teaching depart- ments in the School of Education should forward letters directly to the Offce of Registration and Records, 1513 Admin. Bldg. by 11 a.m. Wed., Aug.' 23. Hopwood Awards: All manuscripts must be in the Hopwood Room, 1006 Angell Hall, by 4:30 p.m., Fri., Aug. 11. Events Thursday Baratin, the informal conversation group of, the French Club, will meet Thurs., Aug. 10, from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Romance Languages Dept. Lounge, 3050 Frieze Bldg. All those interested in speaking French are cordially invited to stop in. Student Recital: Henry Fuchs, pianist will present a recital in partial fulfill- men of the requirements for the degree Master of Music on Thurs., Aug. 10, 8:30 p.m. In. Aud. A. He will perform compositions by Mozart, Brahms, Beethoven and Chopin. Open to the general public. Student Recital: Philip Mason, vio- linist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Music on Thurs., Aug. 10, 4:15 p.m., Aud. A. Mr. Mason has selected compositions by Corelhi, DIAL NO 2-6264 Brahms, Chausson and Bartok. He will be accompanied by Coral Mason, pian- ist. Open to the public. Linguistics Forum Lecture: Thurs., Aug. 10 at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. E. M. Uhlenbeck, Royal University of the Netherlands, will discuss "Some First Principles of the Study of Syntax." Summer Session Lecture-Thursday, Aug. 10, 4:15 p.m., Aud. B, Angell Hall. W.H.G. Armytage, Prof. of Education, University of Sheffield, England, will discuss "Coordination and Autonomy in British Universities." Doctoral' Examination for King Chin Kwan, Pharmaceutical Chemistry; thes- is: "Coating of Tablets with Syrup," Thurs., Aug. 10, 3002 Pharm. Research Bldg., at 2 p.m. Chairman, A. M. Mat- tocks. Events Friday Student Recital: Robert Blasch, pian- ist, will present a recital on Fri., Aug. 11, 4:15 p.m., in Aud. A. He will play the compositions of Scarlatti, Schubert and Ravel. Open to the general pub- lic. Student Recital: Katherine Scott, violinist, will present a recital in lieu of a thesis for the degree Master of Music (Music Literature) on Fri., Aug. 11, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A. She will perform works of Handel, Brahms, Saint-Saens and Bartok, and will be open to the general public. Doctoral Examination for William Al- fred Little, Germanic Languages & Literatures; thesis: "The Eye-Complex In the Dramas of. Franz Griilparzer," Fri., Aug. 11, 1080 Frieze Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, W. A. Reichart. Placement The following schools have listed teaching vacancies for the 1961-62 school year. Coleman, Mich.-Elem. Ann Arbor-Retarded (Type "A" and "B"). PLEASE NOTE 4 SHOWS DAILY AT 1:00 3:30 6:15 AND 9:05 Farmington, Mich. - Elem.; Engl./ Art; HS Librarian; Spec. Educ.; Voc. Mus. Consultants. Parchment, Mich.-Elem.; HS Art; Ment. Handi. Cavina, Calif. (Covina-Valley Unified Sch. Dist.)-Elem.; Jr. HS Lang. Arts; HS Physics/Electronics, Span./Engl., Math, Math/Sci., Indust. Arts; Sp. Ed. (Deaf, Ment. Retard.), Guid. Parma, O.-Elem.; Jr. JS Engl., Span. Klamath Falls, Ore.-Elem.; Elem. Ment. Retard; HS Engl. For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, NO 3-1511, Ext. 3547. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: American Home Foods, Ann Arbor- Immediate opening for Junior Ac- countant. Recent grad with BBA in Acctg. (including Cost Aectg.). Exper- ience not required. Smiggen's Restaurant & Bar, Ypsi- lanti, Mich. - Pianist-Entertainer for Coffee Shop soon to be located in Tow- er Motel, Ann Arbor. Experience in musical entertainment field desired. Degree not essential. California Civil Service-Recreation. Therapist-BA in Recreation or Recrea- tion Therapy. Applications continually accepted. California residency not re- quired. Michigan Civil Service-Openings for grads in Library Science with profes- sional experience as Reference Librar- ian or Library Consultant. Also, Insti- tution Social Worker-require BA. in pertinent field. File for exam by Aug. 28. General Foods Corporation, Battle Creek, Mich.-Junior Technologist with BS in Chem. for Research Dept. analyt- ical lab. staff. No experience required. Eaton Manufacturing Co., Valve Div., Cleveland, Ohio-Seniors or recent grads for openings leading to management nositions. One position requires major in Bus. Ad.; the other, major in Metal- lurgy. Please contact General Division, Bu- reau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for further information. Part-Time Employment The following part-time jobs are available. Applications for these jobs I& M can be made in the Part-time Place- ment Office, 2200 Student Activities Building, during the following hours: Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 1:30 til 5 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring stu- dents for part-time or full-time tem- porary work, should contact Jack Lar- die, Part-time Interviewer, at NO 3-1511 extension 3553. Students desiring miscellaneous odd jobsushould consult the bulletin board in Room 2200, daily. MALE 1-Athletic instructor, Phys. Educ. major, 2 hours every afternoon. Start Aug. 25, til end of first se- mester. 2-Japanese translators, part-time til November. 1-Janitor, must be at least 21 years of age. 2-6 p.m. Monday thru Fri- day, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday. Start September. 3-Salesmen, commission basis, must " have car. 1-Reliable person with car, to pick up boy from school at 11:30 a.m., other odd jobs til 1 p.m., Monday thru Friday. 27-Psychological subjects, several one hour experiments. 3-Salesmen, commission or salary ba- sis. 1-Invoice clerk, full-time for 3-4 days.I 2-Gas station attendants. Start Sep- tember, every other weekend and 1 night per week. FEMALE 1-Stenographer, 20 hours per week flexible for one month. 1-Stenographer, 2-3 afternoons per week, permanent position. 1-Reliable person with car, to pick up boy from school at 11:30 a.m. other odd jobs til 1 p.m., Monday thru Friday. 1-Technical typist/dental assistant. Start September; 2 afternoons per week. 1-Secretary, Library or Teaching background, 20 hours per week, permanent position. 15-Psychological subjects, two 1-hour experiments. 1-Invoice clerk, full-time 3-4 days. 1-Technical typist, who can use dic- taphone. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Prefer some- one with medical vocabulary for three weeks. 1-Technical typist full-time for 2 weeks, use electric typewriter. ORGANIZATION NOTICES The Sailing Club will meet 7:45 this evening, in Rm. 311 West Engineering. Movies and shore school will follow the regular business meeting. le LEIE. , BARGAIN CORNER BOY'S BIKE-Austrian-built J. C. Hig- gins. $20. Call NO 2-4736. SUMMER SPECIALS: Men's Wear: short sleeve sport shirts 99c & $1.50; knit sport shirts $1.44; wash-n-wear slacks 2.77; many other big buys-Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W21 A CONSIGNMENT SHOP for furniture, dishes, baby items, rugs, what-have- you. The Treasure Mart, 529 Detroit St., NO 2-1363. Open Monday and Fri- day nights till 9:00. WI FOR RENT ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for rent. NO 2-1443. C17 ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking available for summer and fall semes- ters. NO 2-1443. 016 BRANDIES} CO-OP for married stu- dents: 3-rm. apt, for $73 including utilities. Near campus. Children wel- come. Call 3-1444. 803 E. Kingsley. C35 REDECORATED APARTMENTS -Two blocks from campus. Newly furnished and painted. For 1, 2, 3, or 4 girls. NO 3-7268. C32 APARTMENT FOR 5 MEN, very well furnished, innercoil spring mat- tresses, 2 baths. Nice location, near campus, street parking. Phone NO 2-5152. C30 HELP WANTED TWO WOMEN NEEDED for telephone work in downtown office of local dry cleaners. Interesting work. Guaran- teed salary. Two shifts available. Tel. NO 2-9546. H16 NORTH CAMPUS RESIDENT to deliver Michigan Daily on North Campus during school year. Morning delivery. no collections. May be de l ive reid simultaneously with morning Free Press. (Route available 9/10.) Call Steve, NO 5-9486. H18 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Sealpoint Siamese, approx. 15 months nld, vicinity of, Church-S. Universtiy. Call 3-3854 after 5:30 p.m. A? MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS A-1 New and Used Instruments, BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-1834 X3 Preview of Grinnell's PIANO FESTIVAL SALE Come in any day and see these tremendous values from $399 up. GRINNELL'S 323 S. Main NO 2-5667 the home of Steinway pianos X2 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LINES 2 3 ONE-DAY .70 .85 SPECIAL SIX-DAY RATE .58 .70 4 1 .00 Figure 5 average words to a line 83 Call Classified betveen 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. Phone NO 2-4786 HELD OVER THRU WEDNESDAY CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessories Complete Automotive Service--All products and services guaranteed. Road Service "You expect more from Standard and you get it." 1220 South University NO 8-9168 S1 REAL ESTATE INCOME PROPERTY for sale. $1500 down. Student apartments for rent. Call 5-9114. RBOR SSOCIATES, REALTORS 303 S. Div. 5-9114 Eves. 3-8424 or 3-0434 R1 FOR SALE OLDTOWN CANOE. At Wirth's Canoe Livery, or call NO 3-9154. B16 PORTABLE TYPEWRITER, $55. Call NO 3-3283 at noon. B17 ROYAL TYPEWRITER-Standard, pica, elderly but serviceable. $15 at 2210 S.A.B., Ext. 2077. B18 CRUISEAIRE SCOOTER, good shape, $100. Cheap, reliable transportation. Must sell. See anytime. Phone NO 3-6597. 315 1956 SPORTSMAN mobile home, 33 ft. by 8 ft. $1600. Ideal for couple. Full bath. Clean. NO 3-4016 or HIckory 9- 2306. B13 BY OWNER, will sacrifice: 2-bedroom ranch, oak floors, storms and screens, garage, fenced yard. Located at 1126 Hawthorne, Ypsilanti. Key at 1040 Olivia, Ann Arbor. Terms available. No reasonable offer will be refused. Reply Box 104, Michigan Daily. B12 WANTED-Driver to take car to Po land or San Francisco, arriving abc 25th. NO 2-7132, Aug. 14 on. Advi~s, I Cali NO 3-4156 Special weekend rates from 3 pm Friday till 9 a.m. Monday . . $12.00 plus 8c a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. 514 E. WASHINGTON ST. *TRUCKS AVAILABLE" USED CARS 1958 FORD convertible, automW transmission, radio, heater. Excell condition. $1200. Call Chuck, ds 8-7874, evenings 5-6384. BUSINESS SERVICES TRANSPORTATION DRIVING EAST August 11--Wanted, 1 or 2, women or couple. Call 8-9892. 07 HOME LATE? CUPBOARDS BARE? You can shop at Ralph's 'til 12 midnight for all grocery supplies. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 2-317 "Just two doors from the Blue Fron out '8 01 atic ent lays N8 '5 Jos IRMA THE BODY appearing TOWN HALL THEATRE TOLEDO, OHIO Matinee, 7:30, and 9:00 shows daily; mid-nite show Sat. AUGUST 11 THRU 17 Read Daily Classifieds ...... ENDS TONIGHT Wctwn in kfttodern-Godlin DIAL NO 5-6290 r t } «; / jt ' ttt, l.f fit ; j l I 'I ft j n ( its sk"+ i.. STUDENTS If you have not paid a subscription or advertising bill of YOUR CREDITS WILL BE WITHHELD Let's all go shopping at 'T' i .'.r.. , of MANIPY N'RP A .,. 5W VI Ar"A6 is-:::. I I