THE MICHIGAN DAILY ILY OFFICI The Daily Official Bulletin is an ficial publication of The Univer- ty of Michigan for which The :ichigan Daily assumes no edi- frial responsibility. Notices ,should e sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to oom 3519 Administration Build- ag, before 2 p.m. two days preced- Qg publication. Friday, June 24, 1960 VOL. LXX, No. 4S General Notices lu s i n e s s Education Get-Together: nday, June 27, 7:30 to 9:00 p.m., at Conference Room, Rackham duate School. All business educa- n students are cordially invited. 'lacement Notices 'he following schools have listed ,hing vacancies for the 1960-61 tool year. t. Clair Shores, Michigan (South e School) - Biology. H.S. English, tevensville, Mich., (Lakeshore P.S.- m (2,5,6); Sec. Voval Music. Jr. L English, H.S. Homemaking/English. 'ltusville, Florida (Brevard County) lem (1-6), Elem. Librarian; Sec. En- sh, Mathematics, Science, Librarian, siness Education, Girls' Phys. Ed., inish, Latin, Vocational Auto Me- nics. Vayne, Michigan (Wayne Memorial I)-H.S. Physics, Industrial Arts. Vhite Plains, New York-Elem., Elem. tElem. Vocal Music, Elem. Special ucation; J. H.S. Mathematics, Gen- 1 Science, Vocal Music, Girls' Phys. S B.H.S. Art, Special Education, anish, Mathematics, Social Studies, ys' Phys. Ed., Girls' Phys. Ed. eysilanti, Michigan -Ypsilanti Coop. AL BULLETIN Nursery)-Kindergarten or Early Elem. (part time) For any additional information, con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Building, NOrmandy 3-1 1151, ext. 489. BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS' GENERAL DIVISION UMRBI, Ann Arbor, Chemist, Research, BA, Woman, Chem. Zoology, Biochem, or Medical Technology. U. S. Civil Service Commision, Clini- cal Social Worker, Occupational Thera- pist, Dietician, all at veterans hospital in Wisconsin, also Supervisory Physical Therapist, Illinois, Young, Skutt, & Breitenwischer, Jackson, Michigan. Accountant, man, major in accounting. Scott, Foresman and Company, Chi- cago, Asst. Arithmetic Editor, Associate Arithmetic Editor, Assistant Secondary Mathematics Editor, need mathematics and teaching background. State of Ohio, Bureau of Probation and Parole, parole officer. grad, in so- cial sciences, psych. or correction. Stromberg-Ca.rlsonl announces marry openings in Engineering and physics, also positions in cabinet design, and as contract administrator, and cost esti- mator. Company in Michigan has openings for Salesmen in training, college de- gree required, Technical Salesmen-in- training, B.S. in Chem, Civil, Mechani- cal or Chem. Engineering. Engineer-in- training, B.S. in Civil, Mechanical or Industrial Engineering; Treasury Clerk/ Accountant, college degree. U. S. Naval Radiological Defense Lab- oratory, San Francisco, has openings for physics, analytical statistics, electronics, operations research analysts, radiologi-. cal chemistry and for a glass apparatus maker. Smith Publications, Dearborn, wo- man, for job as Woman's Editor of The Dearborn Independent, June grad. Wilson & Company, Packers and Pro- visioners, Chicago. Girl, for Central Transcription Department, transcrib- ing letters. Degree in English. Kimberly Clark Corporation, Wis- consin, Interviewer Supervisor, Woman with degreer ineSoc. Science and Psych. Marshall Field and Company, Chicago. restaurant supervisory training pro- gram, woman. Background in home ec or related fields. Johnson's Wax, Racine Wisconsin, Tax Attorrney. Law grad with business training, preferably with accounting. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 3371. Organization Notices (Use of this column for announce- ments is available to officially rec- ognized and registered organiza- tionis only. Organizations planning to be active for the summer ses- sion should register by June 27. Forms available, 2011 Student Acti- vities Building.) For Sunday NEW YORK TIMES HOME DELIVERY to Dorms and Private Residence cal Tom Monaghan NO 8-6911 I -Daily-Allan Winder ACTING FAMILY-Two generations of acting Stephensons are represented by Lucky and John (left) and their father, Jim Bob Stephenson (right). All are making their final stage appearances in "An- "Annie Get Your Gun" this week, before moving away from Ann Arbor, Stephensons To Leave Ann Arbor Stage Development Seminar'Ends Teachers and students from 13> countries enrolled for a two-week seminar on "Community Develop- i ment in Newly Developing Coun- tries," sponsored by the social work school. The seminar is focusing on pro- grams for the improvement of liv- ing conditions in rural communi- ties of newly developing nations". around the world. The conference i ends today. Prof. Arthur Dunham has been in charge of the seminar. Com- munity development, he points out, has been defined as a "pro- cess designed to create conditions of economic and social progress for the whole community with its active participation and the full- est possible reliance upon the community's initiative." Many Countries Community development pro- grams are found in 30 countries and are often carried out with the assistance of the United Nations, .. the United States International COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT-These two visitors p Cooperation Program and various In a two-week seminar here before returning to assist other agencies. improvement programs. The programs try to alleviate nich prblems as lack of agricul- tural productivity, poverty, hun- FRESHMAN BOOM: ger, sickness, illiteracy, lack of sanitation and lack of basic edu- cation. Mieh an ut Prof. Dunham lists four integral parts of an effective community T " development program as being: icarof Competition 1) A planned program, with focus on the total needs of the entire community. By STU GROSS 2) Encouragement of self-help. written Especially for Associated Press the University, whic 3) Technical assistance from 1965 will be the year of truth for competitive for out-st governmental or voluntary organ- Michigan high schools and col- and increasingly selei izations in terms of personnel, leges, according to population state students, will b equipment, supplies or money. projections of the University, petitive for Michian si Total Integration That's the year the big crop of 3) Competitive adm 4) Integration of various spe- post-war babies slams into the only those who are cialties-such as agriculture, ani- colleges demanding classroom will be admitted. P mal husbandry, home economics, space that won't be there without scores never will bect education, public health, and em- a major building program, and criteria for college ad ployment for women, children and putting college admission on a their importance will youth. competitive basis. der a competitive sps Prof. Dunham has studied these Authority for this is University means some youngst programs in Burma, India, Paki- Associate Director of Admissions mittedly could do col stan and the Philippines in 1956- Gayle C. Wilson, who says: the University won 57. 1) In 1960 the number of youths chance because they di reaching 18 years of age in Michi- well enough to meet t gan is 115,000. This will fluctuate tion. i Scho0 mildly through 1964, but in 1965 it There are facts vis will zoom to 170,000, ,a gain of Michigan that show t almost 40,000 from 1664. colleges are not cryi Stulle is Pla 2) The impact on the University the academic progra S tud n Pand other state colleges will be followed if a child wa At Interlch+en heavy. He predicts admission to pete for a college sea Over 900 Michigan high school students will attend the Univer- I 1A'flkA UC I PA iIE 1. Ib NEW, AMAZING DUAL ROLE! -6 "The SCAPEGAT' 1" O the Nrd b DAHNEf DU MAUNIER BEDVIS Covnfe * AND* M-G.M presents The Love Story of a Princess in CINEMASCOPE and COLOR GRACE ALEC KELLY GUINNESS LOUIS JOURDANft "THE SWAN" WEEK DAYS FROM 7 P.M. SAT. & SUN. FROM 1 P.M. By RICHARD LUTZ Jim Bob Stephenson, his wife, Lucy, and their four children say farewell to the University this week with their final local theat- rical appearances in "Annie Get Your Gun," a Playbill presenta- tion of the speech department, opening the summer theatre sea- son. All six have been active in the- atre. Stephenson has accepted a po- sition as associate professor at Kansas State University in Man- hattan, Kan. After teaching at the National Music Camp at In- terlochen this summer, he will move there with the family, Prodigy Rival Parents Three daughters and a son, ranging in age from four to twelve, have rivalled their parents in stage appearances. Lucky, the oldest, has appeared in a number. of Gilbert and Sullivan Society, productions along with her sister' and brother, John, 10, and Evelyn, 8, Robin, the youngest, makes her first public appearance in "Annie" as "a little girl." John, Lucky and Evelyn play Annie Oakley's sisters and brother in the Irving Berlin musical. The older Stephensons will appear as Dr. and Mrs. Percy Ferguson. Children's Theatre "My first continuing venture in area theatre was in 1935 with Valentine Windt and Sally Pierce, in Children's Theatre," Stephen- son recalls. "We were doing 'The Kindly Pirate,' a children's play, written and directed by Richard McKelvey (now assistant editor? of the University's Middle English dictionary). At the end of the second act there was a tremen- dous battle between the 'good guys' and the 'bad guys' . . . The tide of the battle was turned at the last possible minute, but be- fore this happened, many of the children had started to run onto the stage to help out. The curtain had to be brought down to keep them from Joining in the battle." War Interruption Stephenson was active in Child- ren's Theatre for many years- until wartime. During that pre- war period he played "Excursion" with Whitford Kane (then a Broadway star and visiting Uni- versity director). "One of my most memorable moments was during the run of 'Our Town,' during the War in Italy. Suddenly the lights went out: it was an air raid. The sol- diers in the audience didn't want to interrupt the show, so they all turned their flashlights on the stage. The entire drugstore scene, a romantic one anyway, was played by flashlight; the lights came on just as the scene ended." Returns From War One week after his return from the front, in 1945, he had married Lucy Chase, and by the time he returned to Michigan to work on his PhD, in the summer of 1949, their first daughter, Lucky, had arrived. The summer of 1953 was spent in England, where Stephenson gathered material for his doctoral dissertation on Percy Fitzgerald at the British Museum in London. By this time, two more children had arrived: John was born in 1950, Evelyn in 1952. Lucky, who was by now five years old, had had considerable exposure to theatre, having ac- companied her parents to the Highland Park Junior Theatre during rehearsals of many plays. "She used to rock in her buggy on the stage apron," Mrs. Steph- enson remembers, "and when she was absent during performances, the actors missed her." Mrs. Stephenson Recalls Mrs. Stephenson calls on her experience in dramatics in guiding her children's theatrical activity. While her husband-to-be was in Italy during the . war, she was dramatics director at a Girl Scout camp in Indiana. She recalls her first night at camp, when she promised a role to every scout who tried out for the plays. "I had to direct five plays that sum- mer to use them all." During the past year, Mrs. Stephenson has been teaching children's dramatics classes for the Ann Arbor Board of Educa- tion as part of the local recrea- tion program.' Since the summer of 1955, the entire family (Robin, now 4, came in 1956) has spent summers at the National Music Camp in In- terlochen. There, Stephenson has directed and/or played in num- erous plays. Name Professors To Prepare Foreign Texts on English ... Deutsche Grammophon Gesellschaft ARCHI.VE- I Three University professors have been appointed members of the production committee of the Pro- ject on Secondary School Text- books for Teaching English as a Foreign Language sponsored by the National Council of Teachers of English. History of Music Series I20OFF complete catalogue 11 i GRAD SOCIAL HOUR 5-7 P.M., Friday, June 24 VFW LODGE 314 East Liberty Persons attending must be 21 or over Sponsored by the Graduate Student Council ia Prof. Ruth Hok and Prof. Rob- ert Lado of the English Language Institute and Prof. Albert H. Marckwardt of the English de- partment will serve on a com- mittee conferring with a produc- tion teach which is preparing a series of textbooks and other ef- fective study materials for use in classes in English as a foreign language in secondary schools abroad. One objective of the series will be to interpret the culture of the United States and other English speaking nations, as well as to present information on matters of interest to young people in other countries, such as science, explora- tion, and invention. The project is being undertaken in coopera- tion with the United States In- formation Agency. According to its Executive Sec- retary, J. N. Hook, the project is one of the most significant under- taken in recent years by the Na- tional Council of Teachers, an organization composed of more than 60,000 college, high school, and elementary members and sub- scribers. sity's National Music Camp at In- terlochen this summer, Orien Dal- ley, administrator of all-state ses- sions for the camp, said. The program, now in its 24th year, features music and drama session of two weeks duration. There will be eight of them. "The camp has provided in- spiration and technical. advance- ment to students for almost all Michigan secondary schools, has helped them to assume leadership in their own schools, and has set new standards for individual achievement," Dalley said. This will be the fifth summer of the theatre experience and play production sponsored by the speech department. The program will include acting, scene designing and building, make-up and cos- tuming. Plan Parking For Faculty The parking situation will be eased next year when a new fac- ulty parking structure is com- pleted by the University. Plans for constructing the cam- pus structure on Thayer Street were announced recently by Vice- President for Business and Fi- nance Wilbur K. Pierpont. About 400 parking spaces for faculty and staff will be added in the Rackham and Frieze Building area when the structure is fin- ished, probably by the fall of 1961. This is the most critically crowded area for campus parking permit lots, according to a recent survey made by Pierpont's office. "The structure will be financed from fees paid by faculty and staff members, just as the Church Street and Catherine Street struc- tures are being financed," he ex- plained. A $25 annual charge is made for each campus parking permit issued. Construction is slated to begin next winter or early spring, but exact details of the structure and its cost are not yet completed, Pierpont said. L THE DISC SHOP 1210 S. University NO 3-6922 HB F 11 I STEREO or MONAURAL I AL-AMU 25%/ OFF i THE DISC SHOP 0 0 0 0 ALL-CAMPUS DANCE TONITE League Ballroom 1210 S. University NO 3-6922 Our complete stock of DECCA ANGEL # # # # t # # *f*! 20VVi,!OFF MA.TOAN .. 20% OFF . . . , . . . . . . 20% OFF MANTOVAN1 . . . . . . 20% OFF WESTMINSTER .. ..40% OFF THE DISHOP The new management of the Schwaben Inn is presenting for your enjoyment SOCIAL HOUR 4-6 today -serving potato chips, pretzels - Original "Poor Boy" Sandwich Stop in anytime during your leis ure hirs, this weekend. S.G.C. Cinemra (jidd . I 1210 S. University NO 3-6922 TONIGHT AND TOMORROW at 7:00 and 9:00 The silent film and the star system ru 0 O II I L