WEDNESDAY, "JULY 26,1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACE THREE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1 9 6 1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Industrial Changes Challenge Colleges MATH APPLICATIONS: University To Hold Business Seminar *fChELRIUIflS By EARL POLE (. Community colleges will have to enrich their courses if they expect to face the growing chal- lenge in technical terminal edu- cation, according to Prof. Algo D. Henderson, director of the Uni- versity's Center for Study of High- er Education. "American industry has been changing rapidly, technologically. It requires an ever increasing flow of young persons trained at the semi - professional level," Prof. Henderson stated. The Michigan educator asserted that junior college training has, to a great extent, imitated profes- sional schools. Four Handicaps He said there were four definite handicaps that the two-year junior colleges would have to over- come to meet the challenge. First, many of the courses es- tablished in recent years have not been sufficiently founded on data collected through occupational analysis and surveys. Henderson would have all courses aimed at professional development specifi- cally evaluatedebymen in the par- ticular course's field, as well as by educators from other schools who have worked closely with industry. No Experimentation Second, in many instances lab- oratory work has either been in- adequate or purely repetitive, in The school of business admin- istration hashreceived a $43,100 grant from the Ford Foundation for an intensive high-level faculty seminar next summer in the ap- plication of mathematics to busi- ness problems. The seminar, first discussed at a curriculum meeting in Januarys and later suggested to the Ford Foundation by the University, will be administered by Prof. William< J. Schlatter of the accounting de- partment. Prof. W. Allen Spivey of the school of business administration and the economics department will serve as program consultant, ac- cording to Dean Floyd Bond of the school of business administration. Prof. Schiatter will serve as head of the selection committee, PROF. WILLIAM SCHLATTER and will be responsible for all .. to head seminar seminar arrangements. Prof. Spivey will oversee the develop- to the selection committee, headed ment of curriculum material for by Prof. Schlatter. the seminar which will be hc-ld Mathematician Director from July 16 to September 8, 1962. A professor of mathematics, ex- Visiting Faculty perienced in teaching both math- NEWMAN CLUB dinner and dance this Friday at 7P.Ml. $100 DIAL NO 2-6264 ENDS WEDNESDAY TURNER AMRUL HOMRO *A*TAU EUM~r AI#1S'OSC COLOR Shows at 1:00 - 3:05 - 5:10 7:15 and 9:20. Feature 9 mins. later travel allowance and a displace- ment allowance of $75 per month for him, $25 per month for his wife,hand $12.50 per month for each child, not to exceed a total of $125 per month. No Tuition There will be no charge for tuition. The director of the program will undertake to assist participants in making suitable housing arrange- ments. The program will be limited to thirty. Priority will be given to teachers in graduate programs active in research, though some appoint- ments may be available for ex- ceptionally qualified teachers in undergraduate programs. The University participants will prepare themselves during the academic year 1961-62 by partici- pation in a faculty seminar in mathematics which will be con- ducted by Prof. Spivey, and which will meet three times a week. Device Helps Find Jobs A tool resembling an ice pick helped the University raise its total number of part-time jobs for students from 2,052 in 1959-60 to 3,144 in 1960-61, employment ser- vices manager Robert K. Richards reports. The device led to an increase in speed and quality given em- ployers, a definite factor in the upswing. The method is simple: On each students interview card, for each major characteristic he has, a specific pie-shaped hole is sliced from his card. When a request is received, the interviewers insert the "ice picks" through the holes- designating the proper characteristics. Thus only the cards with the desired holes fall free, while the others remain suspended on the "ice pick." BIKES and SCOOTERS BOY'S BIKE-J. C. Higgins English- built. $20. Call NO 2-4736. FOR RENT ROOM for 1 or 2 quiet gentlemen. Cook- ing privileges optional. NO 8-8345. 027 2 GIRLS wanted in fall to share roomy, mod. apt. near campus. Call Elaine Pratt, NO 3-1561, ext. 168. C26 ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for rent. NO 2-1443. 017 CAMPUS-HOSPITAL-Lovely furnished apartment suitable for four girls. Parking. Call 2-0671. C66 ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking available for summer and fall semes- ters. NO 2-1443. 016 NOW A VAILABLE - Across from East Quad: 2 parking spaces, part of an exciting apartment, and a small duck. Call NO 5-7892. 09 Ann Arbor's FINEST Apartments at Moderate RentalI s Schedule of Rentals: Studio................$ 98 to 126 1-Bedroom.............120 to 180 2-Bedroom ............225 to 270 3-Bedroom ............. 270 to 330 (Including heat, water. Frigi- daire range and refrigerator, swimming pool) Models open 11 am. to 8 p.m. daily and Sunday. Immediate occupancy. 2200 Fuller Road. HURON TOWERS LINES 2 3 4 I DAY 3 DAYS .70 .85 1.00 1.95 2.40 2.85 6 DAYS 3.45 4.20 4.95 Figure 5 average words to a line. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. Phone NO 2-4786 Approximately 30 faculty mem- bers, half from the University and half from other universities in the nation, will study the uses of mathematics in such business problems as marketing, cost an- alysis, forecasting, production and distribution. Topics covered by the program will include elements of probability theory, linear and quadratic de- cision rules and applications, op- timal response to sales fluctua- tions and estimates of cost func- tions, their use and application. Faculty members in the program will be selected from those nomin- ated by the deans of schools which are members of The American As- sociation of Collegiate Schools of Business. Considerable competence in mathematics will be required for participation in the program. Faculty members interested in joining in the seminar will fill out a four page application form, which will be forwarded to Dean Bond, who will then forward it - +4- "rl ifn Onnlir-ofinnc to MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES ematics and its applications to business problems will direct all instruction. He will also beavail- able for consultation with those fellows working on research prob- lems in which mathematics is used. Tutorial assistance will be avail- able. Several visiting lecturers will be engaged to speak on topics of particular interest to the fellows. The Ford Foundation has pro- vided a stipend of $800 for each participant in the program, a Baroque Trio To Perform The University Baroque Trio will present a concert at 8:30 p.m. today in the Rackham lecture hall. The program will include the works of Henry Purcell, Jean- Baptiste Loeillet, Nicolo Jommel- li, Johan Sebastian Bach, and Georg Phillipp Telemann. HELP WAN1 ED EVENING WORK-(male or female) telephone operators needed to do tele- phone work for local dry cleaners. Hours 5 P.M. to 9 P.M. For interview call NO 2-9546. H13 FOR SALE EAST OF WASHTENAW - Vine Wood area. Excellent location, near elemen- tary school, junior high school, and campus. Three large bedrooms, living room with fireplace, sun room, gra- cious separate dining room, large kitchen with breakfast area. Base- ment recreation room. Wall-to-wall carpeting and drapes. Recently re- decorated. Garage. Immediate occu- pancy if desired. Under $30,000. Call NO 3-8221. B11 TRANSPORTATION FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 S7 USED CARS JIM WHITE CHEVROLET USED CARS 1958 TR-3 roadster, solid black, 4- speed transmission, $1395. 1960 Opel, 2-door deluxe, in perfect shape, $1095. 1960-Falcon, custom 2-door, auto- matic shift, radio, and heater, $1495. 1955 Chevrolet convertible, red and white with white walls, like new, $795. 1954 Fords, from $95. 1952 Chevrolet, 2 to choose from, from $195. 1953 Ford 9-passenger station wagon, V-8, overdrive, good transpor- tation. TWO LOCATIONS Downtown, Huron at First University lot, Washington at Division. N1 '61 VW BLUE SEDAN delux with radio. Call 662-9152. N3 BARGAIN CORNER SUMMER SPECIALS: Men's Wear: short sleeve sport shirts 99c & $1.50; knit sport shirts $1.99; wash-n-wear slacks 2.77; many other big buys-Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W2 REAL ESTATE BY OWNER, will sacrifice: 2-bedroom ranch, oak floors, storms and screens, garage, fenced yard. Located at 1126 Olivia, Ann Arbor. Terms available. No reasonable offer will be refused. Reply Box 104, Michigan Daily. B12 n A ren%1F~~e I't&CC .3D19 CAR SERVICE. ACCESS0K C-TED STANDARD SERV Friendly service is our busie Atlas tires, batteries and acces Complete Automotive Service-A products and services guarantee Road Service "You expect more from Standa and you get it." 1220 South University NO 8-9168 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS PROF. ALGO HENDERSON ... sees challenge which case the student has little or no real opportunity for original experimentation. Third, there is a well known, lack of teachers well trained 'in their specialties. And fourth, in numerous cases there has been a lack of support and understanding from senior colleges and universities for junior college goals. NO 3-0800 NO 5-9161 C10 .....:.,............ ........... : " .": : . .:::::... . .... :: .4v ... . }: .r . : . r.:::'.}:"{:.... ,' v""...1 : DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN {Y Y ".:.':r..v Yl~%V.Vl .1".r:..r r ~.". :.4:." {S:........,.....:.. 1 ..4.1... :{. 1 * THURSDAY (Continued from Page 2) the Romance Languages Department Lounge, 3050 Frieze Bldg. All those in- terested in speaking French are cordial- ly invited to stop in. Linguistics Forum Lecture: Prof. Har- ry Josselson, Wayne State University, will speak on "Machine Translation: Goals and Results" on Thurs., July 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. Summer Session Lecture Series: Ben- jamin Quarles, chairman, Department of History, Morgan. State College, will discuss "The Negro in the Civil War" at 4:15 p.m., Thurs., July 27 in Aud. A. Placement Teacher Placement-The Board of Na- tional Missions of the United Presby- terian Church has vacancies for teach- ers in the following areas. Eighteen to twenty-four hours in education and practice teaching required; Master's and experience desired. Albuquerque, New Mexico (Menaul School)-Biology/Gen. Science; Girls PE. Chimayo, New Mexico (John Hyson Memorial School)-Grades 1 and 2. Truchas, New Mexico (Truchas Pres. Day School)-Grades 5 and 6. Ganado, Arizona (Ganada Mission HS) -Home Ed.; Science. Mount Pleasant, Utah (Wasatch Acad- emy)-Biology; Bus. Ed.; Home Ec. AIR CONDITIONED BOWLING 1:00 P.M.- 11:00 P.M. daily except Sun. at the MICHIdAN UNION For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, NO 3-1511, Ext. 3549. PLACEMENT INTERVIEW: AUG. 1-3- U.S. Naval Air Station, Grosse Ile, Mich.-Naviator Information Team in- terviewing at Michigan Union Tues. through Thurs., 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. In- terested in qualified men who wan to earn officer's commission & fly with the fleet. Information on all officer programs, including WAVE programs will be available. Appointment not es- sential. SUMMER PLACEMENT REQUEST: Skart, Inc., Saline, Mich.-Salespeople to sell Portable Transistor Tape Re- corders. Men or WOMEN. For further information visit the Summer Placement Service, 212 SAB. Open every weekday afternoon from 1:00 to 5:00 and all day Friday. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Management Consulting Firm, N.Y.C. -High-salaried senior positions in client firms:Transformer Manager, to operate & maintain Transformer Dept., including design & prod. or an in- house & sub-contract basis. Engrg. de- gree preferred, but not essential; mini- mum 10 yrs. related exper. Also, Engi- neering Manager, to manage & oper- ate a Product Design & Engrg. Dept. BSEE or BSME with minimum 10 yrs. responsible pertinent experience. Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. -Bi-weekly listing of current vacancies for college grads, men & women; now on file at 3200 SAB. Openings for Su- nervisors. Librarians, Bibliographers, Science Specialists, etc. Knowledge of modern foreign languages desirable for most. Please contact Gen'l. Div. of Bureau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for fur- ther information. Part-Time Emnloyment available. Applications can be made in 2200 SAB Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring part- time or temporary employes should con- tact Jack Lardie at NO 3-1511, Ext. 3553. Students desiring miscellaneous jobs should consult the bulletin board in Rm. 2200, daily. MALE 1-Driver, to drive car to San Fran- cisco, Calif.,anytime from Septem- ber 1 thru 15. 2-Japanese translators, for library re- search, part-time until November. 1-Married couple, no children, be- tween 25-30 years of age, to super- vise children, permanent position. 3-Salesmen, commission basis, must have car. 3-Salesmen, salary or commission basis. 2-Lifeguards, part-time. 20-Psychological subjects, several one hour experiments. 2-Salesmen, selling magazine sub- scriptions, commission basis. FEMALE 1-Married couple, no children, be- tween 25-30 years of age, to super- vise children, live in, permanent position. 8-Psychological subjects, two 1 hour experiments. 2-Japanese translators, for library re- search, part-time until November. BUSINESS SERVICES DATA PROCESSING of all kinds per- formed. Programming, statistical an- alysis, and consulting. Call NO 5-6713. Jig STUDENTS: Neat, expert typing of your papers, etc., pickup and delivery in, Ann Arbor. Electric typewriter. Call GL 3-6258. J6 Picnic? Party? Snack? Breakfast, lunch, or dinner? Shop at RALPH'S MARKET for good food. 709 Packard Open every night till midnightl J8 CAMPUS OPTICIANS Most frames replaced while you wait. Broken lenses duplicated FAST service on all repairs. 240 NICKELS ARCADE NO 2-9116 NO 8-6019 J3 PERSONAL PROCLAMATION from 512: Madame Curie is expecting. F12 Subscribe now to the MICHIGAN DAILY. $1.00 for the rest of the summer. News, campus events, entertainment and the classifieds will make the summer months more interesting, more fun. F11 323 the A-1 New and Used Instrument BPNJOS. GUITARS and BONG, Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-1 Preview of Grinnell's PIANO FESTIVAL SALI Come in any day and see these tremendou values from $399 up. GRINNELL'S S. Main NO 2.5f home of Steinway pia T f, ; i r ft , ICE 8s. rd 81 is ,34 E IS 667 Inos XR I S COEDS: k . . I! MONTH-END c Gay Bats The The following part-time jobs are umere tud Nt 11 I Gayly colored STRAWS, VINYLS, TAPESTRIES from 1.98 BEAUTIFUL LINENS woven stripes and leathers-from 5.00 to 10.00 TODAY 1 901 DIAL NO 8-6416 The story of a tempestuous woman who, refuses the "bondage" of marriage for her right to take love where she finds it.! iret Like a bee sipping honey,,. she went Of. from man to ABOVE-- stunning bag of TAP ESTRAW with vinyl trim, comes in bone and black is still on sale at the bookstores and at the Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street originally 12.95 now 7.00 A 7 A! cAdr"e Intro ducing I I