THE MICHIGAN DAILY iterence Feature REGENTS Approve Committee Appointments ianist Blocb anist Joseph Bloch of the Jul- I School of Music will be a ured performer at the Univer- s Summer Conference on ao Teaching, June 27-July 1. loch will present a concert, as as three lecture demonstra- s. The demonstrations will be Kplorations" into Repetory, bnic, and "Music Itself." rof. Benning Dexter will pre- a teaching demonstration on thoven Sonata, Op. 13. A ses- on 20th Century performance mitces will be conducted by . Robert Hord.' ro. Marian Owen will talk on nets of memorization." "The ces of J. S. Bach" will be the ect of a lecture demonstration Charles Fisher,- instructor in piano. he~ conference will be spon- d by the music school and the ension Service. sychologist illsbury Dies t Age of 87 falter Pillsbury, professor ritus of psychology, died sud- ly June 3 at St. Joseph Hospi- at the age of 87. rof. Pillsbury was the first irman of the psychology de- tment, and was also the first ctor of the Psychological Lab- ory here. He held the former tion from 1929 to 1942. graduate' of the University of raska in 1892, Prof. Pillsbury ived his doctoral degree from nell. He wrote several books, ay of which were standard is in psychology for many rs. :e was president of the Ameri- Psychological Association in ), was a member of the Na- al Academy of Science, and ed as an exchange professor, he Sorbonne in 1923. rof. Pillsbury was on the fac- at the University continually 45 years, beginning in 1897. Thirty-one committee appoint- ments were approved at the"June Regents meeting. Prof. Gordon Van Wylen of the engineering college was named to succeed himself for a three- year term on the Dearborn Cen- ter executive committee. Caroline Dow, '63, was appoint- ed as a student representative on the Development Council Board of Directors. She will succeed Su- sanne Rockne, '60. Two appointments for three- year terms were made to the Mental Health Institute Advisory Committee. Dr. Reed Nesbitt of the medical school and Prof. E. Lowell Kelly of the psychology and sociology departments were named to succeed Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr., of the public health and medical schools and Prof. Marston Bates of the zoology de- partment. Angell Continues On the Committee on American Institutions Lectureship and Pro- fessorship, Prof. Robert Angell of the sociology department was appointed to succeed himself for a~ three-year term. Three appointments, all for three-year terms, were made to the Institute for Social Research executive committee. Prof. Fedele Fauri, dean of the social work school, Prof. William Haber of the economics department and Vice-President and D e a r b o r n Center Director William Stirton were all named to succeed them- selves. Prof. Aarre Lahti of the archi- tecture college was named for a four-year term to the college's executive committee, succeeding Prof. David Reider, also of the college. Flint College Committee Five appointments were made to the Flint College executive committee: Prof. Douglas Hayes of the business administration school, Howard Jones of the' edu- cation school, Edward Calver of the Flint College English depart- ment and Robert Cojeen of the college's business administration department were reappointed for one-year terms. Prof. William Murchie of the Flint College zoology department was also appointed for a one-year term on the committee after serv- ing the second semester of this year as a replacement for Prof. Frederick Test of the zoology de- partment. Profs, Irving Copi of the phil- osophy department and Alfred Sussman of the botany depart- ment were named to the literary college executive c o m m i t t e e. Given three-year terms, they suc- ceed Prof. Otto Graf of the Ger- man department and Cecil Craig of the mathematics department. Graduate School Board On the Rackham graduate school executive board, Profs. Robert Bartels of the mathe- matics department and Sidney Fine of the history department will begin five-year terms, suc- ceeding Prof s. Ruel Churchill of the mathematics department and Paul Henle of the philosophy de- partment. On the public health school ex- ecutive committee, Prof. Kathryn Robeson was appointed to a four- year term and ,Prof. Solomon Ax- Prof. Schell To Lecture. Prof. Erwin H. Schell, professor emeritus at the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, has been ap- pointed lecturer in the business administration school's Public Utility Executive Program. The appointment, which was ap- proved at the June Regents meet- ing, covers the two sessions of the program to be given this summer from June 19 to July 15 and from July 31 to Aug. 26. elrod was named to serve during the period that Prof. William Gibson is serving as acting dean. Prof. Robeson succeeds Prof. Mabel Rugen. Of the six appointments to the Institute of Science and Technol- ogy executive committee, four were current members reappoint- ed for three-year terms: Profs. Paul McCracken of the business administration school, Robert Parry of the chemistry depart- ment, Alan Macnee of the engi- neering college and T h o m a s Francis, Jr., of the public health and medical schools. IST Appointments Prof. Dugald Brownof the zo- ology department was named to succeed Prof. Leo Goldberg, formerly of the astronomy de- partment, for a two-year term on the committee and Prof. Horace Davenport of the medical school was appointed to succeed Vice- President for Research Ralph Sawyer for a one-year term. Three appointments for three- year terms on the Wollow Run Laboratories executive committee were approved by the Regents. Profs. William Dow of the engi- neering college, Rensis Likert of the psychology and sociology de- partments and H. R. Crane of the physics department will succeed, respectively, Profs. George Hay of the engineering college, E. Lowell Kelly of the psychology department and William Parkin- son of the physics department. Prof. G. Max Wingo of the edu- cation school and Ernest Brater of the engineering college were appointed to succeed themselves for four-year terms on the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics. Registration Eased by New Form EASIER?-Some people just don't seem to realize when they're well off. This young woman obviously has not been told that, with the abbrexiated new IBM registration form, registration need not be so tiring. Perhaps someone should wake her and tell her. r .1 i r I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 9 -7 _______ " " " M ~" A* * f ws T. M. not. U.Pa. CW "I always like to do business with a firm that uses the Want Ads I" 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 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. two days preced- ing publication. TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1960 VOL. LXX, No. 1S General Notices University of Michigan G r a d u a t e Screening Examinations In French And German: All graduate students desiring to fulfill their foreign language re- quirement by passing the written ex- amination given by Prof. Lewis (for- merly given by Prof. Hootkins) must pass an objective screening examina-1 tion. The next administration of the objective screening examination will be on Wed., June 29, from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. in Aud. C, Ang;ell Hall. Within 48 hours after the examination the names of the students who have passed will be posted on the Bulletin Board outside the office of Prof. Lewis, Ex- aminer in Foreign Languages, Room 3028, nackham Bldg(. Students desiring to fulfill the Graduate School's re- quirement in French and German are alerted to an alternate path. A grade of B or better in French 12 and Ger- man 12 will satisfy the foreign lan- guage requirement. A grade of B or better in French 11 and German 11 is the equivalent of having passed the objective screening examination." French Club Meeting. Wed., June 22 at 8:30 p.m. in Room 3050, Frieze Bldg. Come and speak French with your friends and other French people from Ann Arbor. During the Summer Ses- sion, four outstanding French films will be shown beginning with "Mr. Hulot's Holiday" on Thurs., June 30. Future films will be "Bizarre, Bizarre" "Casque d' Or," and "Le Plaisir." Membership cards will be sold Wed., June 22. Tomorrow evening, 8:00 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, the Departmentj of Speech presents the opening pro- duction of Playbill Summer 1960, Ir- ving Berlin's "Annie Get Your Gun." Performances tomorrow evening through Saturday evening. Tickets available at box office 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today; 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. tomorrow through Saturday. Season tickets for the entire Play- bill still available. Subsequent produc- tions will include Jean Giraudoux' "Amphitryon 38" (July 6-9), William Shakespeare's "As You Like It" (July 20-23), William Inge's "Picnic" (July 27-30), and Mozart's opera (with the School of Music) "Don Giovanni" (August 3-6). Season tickets available for all five productions or any four productions Recitals Student Recital: Miss Esther Cupps will present a recital in Hill Aud. on Tues., June 21, at 8:30 p.m. in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Bachelor of Music. Miss Cupps has included in her program composi- tions by Lubeck, J. S. Bach, Franck, and Dupre. Open to the public. Placement Notices Robin Hood Flour Mills Ltd., Canad- ian, Job Rotation Training Program, Degree:TLiberal Arts or Business Ad- ministration. Rand McNally, Chicago. Graduate. Junior Editor. Automatic Electric Co., Ill,' June Grad. Library Science, tech. library. Also woman with Sociology or Psych. ,or personnel work. F. A. Owen, Publishing Co., sales rep- resentative. Education background pre- ferred. W. H. Lambert Co., Eng. Grad, sales. Heating. General Electric, Detroit. Mining Sales Engineer, recent Grad. J. M. Dain & Co. Inc., Minnesota, se- curity analyst for stock exchange, re- search department. Doubleday and Co., college sales rep- resentative, extensive travel. Also sales representative for paperbacks. Not nec- essarily English majors. Harvard. Electrical or Electronics En- ginees. BS or MA in Electrical or Elec- tronic Engineering. Metropolitan Planning Department, Marion County, Indiana. Design plan- ner. Masters or BA plus experience in design, architecture or landscape arch- itecture. John A. Shocter. Woman with design background, recent grad considered. In Ann Arbor. Mechanical Products, Jackson, Mich, Trainee in cost accounting. Recent grad, Bus. Ad with accounting major, ..For further information concerning any of the above positions, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin., Ext. 3371. SUMMER PLACEMENT Job requests are still coming in. Come in and browse. Room D528, Stu- dent Activities Bldg., 1:30 to 5 p.m. Secretary, full or part time. Waiters, resort in the Pocanos, Pennsylvania, July 15 on. Male for part time job with insurance company. And there are others. JET AGE EFFICIENCY-Actually, the slow process of registering thousands of students correctly and with a minimum of work has been facilitated with the innovation-not only for registrants, but also for University employes, who find their end of the job made more than a little easier with the end of the railroad ticket. Here we have one example of the ease with which the new forms can be arranged and filed for future reference. DAILY PHOTO FEATURE Story by ANDREW HAWL EY Photographs by DAVID GILTROW ____ --- - - - - --- -- --- - - i _ _ - _ -------____-____ _ i Your Sport Shirts Deserve the Best WORRYING ... vacation? Use our convenient SPORT SHIRT LAUNDERING service this summer. Enjoy the smooth comfort of a WRINKLE-FREE finish. Improve your child's grades and Initiative this summer Parents, now you can help your child to new success in his school work. You can give him a talent, that will prove its value many times over in school and college, career, and personal use. Columbia Uni- versity proved that typewrit- ing skill will help children in these ways: 1. Improve grades in spelling, English and languages. 2. Increase power of expres- sion. 3. Develop self-reliance and initiative. 4. Improve study habits and Call NO 3-4185 ormo w1w W& AVW of 11111 >:, . '' Yn.?7 t :.:: .: . . :. .