THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY IPAr-r rrywarV THE MICHIGAN DAILY'~t A F~ U~' ?U~WW~~~ £7 £1~J E~ .1. £1D~E~Ea YAtirl': '1'titGr:L ENDS TONIGHT WALT DISNEY -VA FACULTY-STUDENT: SGC Committee Lists Fall ReadingSeminars ~.ELUESflhEDS Student Government Council's Reading and Discussion Program will sponsor six faculty-student seminars early this fall, commit- tee chairman Jeannie Pann, '63, announced yesterday. Prof. James Spuhler, chairman of the anthropology department, will lead a seminar on "Science FRIDAY * Choose Pierpont To Head Group DIAL NO 8-6416 The story of a tempestuous wo- man who refuses the "bondage" of marriagesfor her right to take love where she finds it? Vice-President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont has been elected president of the Na- tional Federation of College and University Business Officers As- sociation for 1961-62. Pierpont previously served as vice-president of the organization for two years and headed the arrangementsscommittee for its national assembly last year. The federation is comprised of five regional associations of business officers. BILLIA RDS and SWIMMING t t and Culture," with Sir C. P. Snow's "Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution" as the pri- mary source book. Two members of the psychology department, Professors Frederick' Wyatt and Wilbert McKeachie, will lead the "Psychology of Re- ligion" discussions. The reading will center around works by Sig- mund Freud, with emphasis on his "The Future of an Illusion." Utopian Literature Three varying views of "Uto- pian Literature" will be provided by Assistant Dean of Men John Bingley (a member of the history department), Prof. James Gindin of the English department and Prof. Kenneth Boulding of the economics department. Reading in this seminar will pivot about George Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four" with sup- plementary readings by Orwell, Joyce Carey and Aldous Huxley. Ayn Rand's four books, "The Fountainhead," "The New Intel- lectual," "Atlas Shrugged" and "We the Living," will be the read- ings for a seminar on her philos- ophy. No seminar leader has been named yet. To Discuss Marxism Prof. Steven Tonsor of the his- tory department and two other leaders to be announced later will conduct a seminar on "Modern Marxism." The primary reading for this discussion is "To the Finland Sta- tion" by Edmund Wilson. Sup- plementary reading will include Isaiha Berlin's "Karl Marx," Sid- ney Hook's "Marx and the Marx- ists" and "The Communist Mani- festo." Miss Pann said the seminars will be scheduled early in the fall and will not conflict, so it is possible to read in the several areas. EMPLOYMENT WANTED WANTED-Baby-sitting jobs. Reliable woman with own transportation. Call 3-0338. BIKES and SCOOTERS BOY'S BIKE-J. C. Higgins English- built. $20. Call NO 2-4736. REAL ESTATE INCOME PROPERTY for sale. $1500 down. Student apartments for rent. Call 5-9114. RBOR SSOC I ATES, REALTORS 303 S. Div. 5-9114 Eves. 3-8424 or 3-0434 R1 TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED - San Francisco- Berkeley area. Aug. 28 or 29. Call Virg, 3-1511, Ext. 2831. 04 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2.40 4.50 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily Phone NO 2-4786 PERSONAL 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 BARGAIN CORNER 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 INTERNATIONAL CENTER--The center for activities of the University's international students, it is a common place for them to meet and exchange opinions. Survey Reports Opinions Of International Student 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 HELP WANT ED STUDENTS: Here's an opportunity to turn your sales ability into money. Taking subscriptions for the Ann Ar- bor Digest is profitable-very profit- able. Miss Dean will tell you all about it. Phone NO 3-8838. H15 PART-TIME stenographer for summer work. Box 510, Ann Arbor. H16 TYPIST two afternoons per week. In- dependent real estate office. $1.75 per hour. Sales people also needed. Com- mission only. Prefer experienced per- son. Call NO 3-9373. H114 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 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 R3 Preview of Grinnell's PIANO FESTIVAL SALE Come in any day and see these tremendous values from $399 up. Avz0 WMA Call NO 3-4156 Special weekend rates from 5 p.m. Friday till 9 a.m. Monday ... $12.00 plus 8c a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. 514 E. WASHINGTON ST. O TRUCKS AVAILABLE G1 3-BEDROOM RANCH, 1%2 miles from campus. New decoration. Available immediately. Couple or students. Call NO 8-8855. C28 ROOM for 1 or 2 quiet gentlemen. Cook- ing privileges optional. NO 8-8345;'C27 4 (Continued from Page 1) Introducing The Volcanic New Screen Personality MELINA MERCOURI "A passion-charged drama"-N.Y. Times "Bursting with provocative insinuations" --World-Telegram I daily except Sunday at the MICHIGAN UNION I I improvement, and 41 per cent saw' themselves as having the same status. Another area of inquiry was how the foreign student found the attitude of Americans toward his home country. Fifty-nine per cent found them to be about what they expected, 23 per cent found attitudes to be better than they had anticipated and 15 per cent encountered less favorable impressions. Admire University Atmosphere Sixty per cent reported them- selves more favorable to the Uni- versity in general. This included such aspects as physical facili- ties, the general social and in- tellectual atmosphere, and quality of education taken as a whole. The report also noted difficul- ties in predicting trends from students from Eastern Europe and Middle Africa-Basutoland, Ethi- opia, Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria, and Tanganyika-since there are so few students at the University from these areas. The survey also inquired into the students' facility with the English language, since that is a "crucial factor" in the life situa- tion of these people. The report found about 85 per cent of the students usually un- derstanding English with little difficulty. The report -delved into such areas as sources of financial sup- port, satisfaction or dissatisfac- tion with housing arrangements, adequacy of income, and attend- ance at gatherings of formal as- sociations. I1 Dial4~T T ENDS TONITE "BY LOVE POSSESSED" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN > ' t. ".i" 't. 44:. .:1":":t .:. }: J....:L. : ......v .~..+.. . h......... ss.:.'.. .. t "' 1ri"'" ;.t'!::4} {h"":4...>:{....S ....::.} """..v:Y: : :.r.":i.....,v ::YA..N :~t' 1 :.::A.::... 5? 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 CAR SERVICE. ACCESSORIES C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessories. Complete A.itomotive Service-All products and services guaranteed. Road Service "You expect more from Standard and you get it." 1220 South University NO 8-9168 S1 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. Bil BUSINESS SERVICES Have a yen for ice cream and pickles? RALPH'S MARKET is open till midnight every night to make shopping convenient & cool. 709 Packard-around the corner from the Blue Front J0 DATA PROCESSING of all kinds per- formed. Programming, statistical an- alysis, and consulting. Call NO 5-6713. J18 STUDENTS: Neat, expert typing of your papers, etc., pickup and delivery in Ann Arbor. Electric typewriter. Call GL 3-6258. J6 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. C17 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. C16 NOW AVAILABLE - Across from East Quad : 2 parking spaces, part of an exciting apartment, and a small duck. Call NO 5-7892. C9 323 the GR IN N ELL'S S. Main NO 2-5667 home of Steinway pianos X2 ' THE KID WHO CAPTURED THE ARMY! " There are bargains aplenty in OUR END-OF-MONTH SALE. These are items that MUST GO before our new fall merchandise arrives! * BLOUSES * SKIRTS * SHORTS * PEDAL PUSHERS * TAPERED PANTS * SUMMER PURSES- All these and many more are included in our tremendous E.O.M. Sale ABOVE ITEMS TO BE MARKED / to !/2 off orig. Prices A small deposit will lay it away for 30 days BARNARD'S Campua Ca'jua/4 BASED ON THE COMIC STRIP THAT THRILLS MILLIONS! AND PLEASE NOTE The Academy "DONDI" .Award "D-N..._..Winner! (Continued from Page 2) Doctoral Examination for Cecelia Zissis, Education; thesis: "The Rela- tionship of Selected Variables to the Career-Marriage Plans of University Freshmen Women," Fri., July 28, 4019 UHS, at 2 p.m. Chairman, E. C. Roeber. Doctoral Examination for Peter Scheiner, Chemistry; thesis: "An In- vestigation of Certain Bicyclic B-Bro-, moacids," Fri., July 28, 3400 Chemistry Bldg., at 10 a.m. Chairman, W. R. Vaughan. Doctoral Examination for Ronald R. Bos, Education; thesis: "An Analysis of the Youth Fitness Project Data and a Comparison of These Data with Comparable Data Recorded Prior to 1940," Friday, July 28, PEM Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, P. A. Hunsicker. Placement Teacher Placement - The following schools have listed vacancies for the for the 1961-62 school year. Coolidge, Ariz.,-Elem.; Jr. High S 5; Librarian;'English; H S Math. Organization Notices B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Mixer with Dancing and Refreshments. This evening at 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. , * * * The Sailing Club will meet at 7:45 this evening, in Rm. 311 W. Engineer- ing. Movies and shore school will fo1- low the regular business meeting. St. Clair Shores (South Lake Schools) Mich.-Jr. High Counseling (woman); H S English. Loveland, Colo. - Physics/Gen. Sci.; Elem. Music; English; Math. Denver, Ind.-Vocal Music, Elmwood Park, Ill.-Elem.; Elem. Vo- cal; H S Counselor; S S/Counseling; Boys P E/Coach. Armonk, New York-Jr. High Math (at least 2 yrs, exp.-can be head of dept. later). Beaver Falls, New York-Physics/Bi- ology/Gen. Sci. Kenton, Ohio-Math; Chem. Norwalk, Ohio-Science or Math. Oshkosh, Wisc.-Jr. High Vocal Music. For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, NO 3-1511, Ext. 3548. POSITION OPENINGS: Company in Michigan-Seeking cap- able Secretary for the President. Young WOMAN with Liberal Arts background plus executive ability & training. Must be personable & efficient. Pertinent experience desirable but not essential. Whirlpool Corp., Admin. Center, Ben- ton Harbor-Ass't Buyer for Purchasing Staff. Recent grad., male, with BA, BBA, or MBA; or up to 2-3 yrs. exper- ience. Alco Products, Inc., Schenectady, N.Y. -Technical openings for Engineers, Mathematicians, Physicists in Nuclear Power Engrg. Dept. B.S. or M.S. de- gree. Michigan Civil Service - Current openings for Bacteriologists and Indus- trial Engineers at various locations throughout Mich. Applications must be filed prior to Aug. 14. Transcript of college credits reauired. Federal Gov't-Several openings for Mathematical Statistician with Bureau of Census; Immigration Patrol Inspec- tors, Dept. of Justice. Also Recreation Soecialists with Army, Navy, & Air Force throughout U.S. & Overseas. Jobs range from GS-5 to GS-15 levels depending upon qualifications. Please contact Bureau of Appoint- ments, General Division-3200 SAB, Ext. 3544, for additional details. Part-Time Employment The following part-time jobs are 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-Tutor, several hours per week, for one month (6th grade, arithmetic). 1-Salesman, selling subscriptions for magazines. 1-Japanese translator, for library re- search, part-time until November. 1-Driver, to drive car to San Fran- cisco, Calif., anytime from Septem- ber 1 thru 15. 22-Psychological subjects, several one hour experiments. 4-Salesmen, salary or commission basis. 2-Salesmen, commission basis, must have car. 2-Lifeguards, part-time, must be ex- perienced. FEMALE 1-Tutor, several hours per week, for one month (6th grade, arithmetic). 1-Japanese translator, for library re- search, part-time until November. 7-Psychological subjects, two 1 hour experiments. 1 111 S. University Ave. * Phone NO 3-2605 * Read Daily Classifieds PAID ADVERTISEMENT Cineta e quld presents Bunuel's This Strange Passion Shown at 2:45 - 6:00 and 9:20 "SERENGETI" Shown at 1:24 - 4:40 and 7:55 EASTMAN COLOR! * * __ Ia '_ - - - -- a il H MIXER Tonight at 7:30 dancing and refreshments 1429 Hill Street . '.' I On tpe'stvreets of 7 MarseilleGs sudclenlij evergthir%3 $tops 5and everoone S$ks 'F*A- here's Faniny P Intfle cafes on t~e corner, men with -too amfc h te on their hands wink an eke and Ssh'Ah,thjere'8 rahnB3r I'n -de fish rnrkets the fat wives$ nudge each other andc boats S.G.C. Cihemna yil Tonight. Friday and Saturday at 7 and 9 LUIS BUNUEL'S "THIS STRANGE PASSION" S s All Summer Hats, Veils and Whimsies orig. were 4.00 to 12.98 r ~98' * You'll find a wide and fascinating selection, too, at these low, low prices! Also ALL SUMMER BAGS orig. to 3.98 Group of Costume Jewelry - Bras - Girdles - 2 pairs of regular-priced 1.65 nylon self-seam hose eautiful Buys in Summer Dresses For Tails - Short - Between Luis Bunuel, one of the most compelling and original talents of our time, came to world at- tention in 1929 with his first film, The Andalusian Dog, on which Salvador Dali collabor- ated. Praised by Arthur Knight for its avoidance of Freudian cliches, this surrealist master- piece is a witty and macabre shocker. A second collaboration with Dali, The Age of Gold, achieved the rare distinction of being banned in Paris, where riots broke out at the initial showings in consequence, it is said, of the film's unmincing attacks on capitalism and reli- gion. Like others who scorned the compromises of the com- mercial theatre, Dali found in the Thirties the documentary as his most congenial medium and went from Dada to direct social criticism in three years. Terre sans Pain (1923) is a stark portrayal of poverty in the countryside. From Mexico, where he moved after World War II, Bunuel has directed a number of remarkable films, of which the best known are Los Olvidados and Robinson Crusoe. To recount the story or de- fine the subject of a Bunuel film is a misleading appraisal of its content. His refined psycholog- ical insights dovetail with his implied criticism of the or- ganization of society. Aesthet- ically, he blends the bold with molds the rhythms of his films into rich and powerful cli- maxes. Only Bergman and Fel- lini spring to mind as equally inventive creators in the con- temporary world film. Los Olvidados was not mere- ly a picture of juvenile delin- quency in Mexico City; it was a study of love and resentment. Robinson Crusoe was not mere- ly a fine depiction of a classic desert island story but a reve- lation of inner loneliness, ego- tism, and the futility of mas- ter-slave relationships. Like- wise, This Strange Passion, which Cinema Guild is present- ing this week, is nit just a story of a pathola ically jeal- ous husband more thrilling than any Hitchcock opus. In some of its essential ideas, it suggests the controversial Age of Gold. For why is the mad- man not only tolerated but ap- proved, even by the closest rel- atives of the aggrieved bride? Because he concerns himself for social position and material gain, the sickness of his soci- ety; and he is powerfully but- tressed by the official moral agency, the church. The won- derful early scene, where, par- ticipating in a ceremony of hu- miliation, the central character is transfixed by the sight of a woman's legs and feet gives more than a clue to his char- acter; it is a view of social hypocrisy. Yet his end, after I III I I I