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November 18, 1966 - Image 8

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1966-11-18

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PAGE EIGHT

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1966

PAGE EIGHT TIlE MiCHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEM~ER iSi 1966

DAILY OFFICIa

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michfgan Daily assumes no editor-
ial responsibility. Notices ,should be
sent in °TPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be-
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding
publication and by 2 .p.m. Friday
for Saturday and Sunday. General
Notices may be published a maxi-
mum of two times on request;. Day
Calendar' item~s appear once only.
Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication. For more
information call 764-8429.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18
Day Calendar
Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem-
inar - "Innovating for Profits and
Growth": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m.
Conference on the Econbmic Outlook
for 1967-Rackham Bldg., 9 a.m.
Dept, of Philosophy Lecture-David
Pears, Oxford University, "The Func-
tions of General Propositions in the
Explanation of Actions": Aud. C, An-
gell Hall, 4 p.m.
Cineia Guild-"Wild and Woolly":
Architecture Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m.
School of Music and Dept. of Art
Opera--Donizetti's "Don Pasquale": Ly-
dia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m.
Southern Asia Club-Will have a bag
lunch today at noon in the Commons
Room of Lane Hall. A film, "Ho Chi
Minh," will be shown. Anyone interest-'
ed is invited to attend.
General iNotices
Fair Lane Assembly: A three-day
conference on Philippine-American re-
lations 'co-sponsored by the University
and the American Assembly, at the Fair
Lane Conference Center on the Dear-
born Campus Thursday through Satur-
day, Nov. 17-19, Some 100 partici-
pants will discuss Philippine-American
relations, hear several speeches on the
subject, and issue a statement of their
findings and recommendations. Among
the speakers will be U.S. Sen. Edmund-
Muskie and permanent Philippine ,rep-
resentative to the United Nations, Am.-
bassador Salvador Lopez.
Alpha Lambda Delta Fellowships:
For the '1967-68 academic year the Na-
tional Council of Alpha Lambda Delta
will award the 'Maria Leonard, the
Alice Orocker Lloyd, the Adele Hag-
ner Stamp, the Kathryn Sission Phil-
lips Fellowship, and. the Executive
Council Fellowships for graduate study.
The amount of each fellowship is
$2000. Attendance at a graduate school
which has a chapter of Alpha Lambda
Delta is encouraged.
Any member of Alpha Lambda Delta
who graduated in 1964, 1965 or 1966
and who has maintained the schol-
astic average throughout her college
career is eligible. Graduating seniors
may apply, if they have maintained
this average to the end of the first
semester (or first quarter) of this year.
Applicants will be judged on schol-
astic record, recommendations, the
soundness of the applicant's project
and purpose and, to some extent, on
need. Application blanks and. informa-
tion may be obtained from chapter
president, Karen Bonwit, 764-7985, 613
Qxford Road. Deadline for submission
of application is Jan. 15, 1967.
Faculty Recommendations for Wood-
row Wilson Fellowships: Members of
the faculty are reminded that the
deadline for recommendations for Wood-
row WIlson Fellowship applicants is
November 20. Letters postmarked Nov.
20 will be .accepted. They should be
sent to Prof. Otto Graf, Department
of German, 1079 Frieze Bldg., Univer-
sity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.

8:30 a.m., WXYZ-TV, Channel 7 -
"Understanding Our World: Who Will
Watch the Watchers?: Escovedo and
Miranda." Dean Francis Allen and Pro-
lessors Joseph R. Julin and Jerold Is-
rael discuss two U.S. Supreme- Court
decisions and their impact on police
interrogation procedures.
12 Noon, WWJ-TV, Channel 4 -
"Germany Today: When Victors Fall
Out." Prof. James Pollock, who was
General Clay's political adviser during
the German occupation, recalls one of
the most exciting, frustrating and hope-
ful eras in modemn history. Prof. Clar-
ence K. Pott is serieshost.
Doctoral Examination for George
William Cornwell, Wildlife Manage-
ment; thesis: "An Ecological Recon-
naissance of Helminth Populations in
the Canvasback (Aythya valisineria),"
Fri., Nov. 18, Room 1024 Natural Re-
sources, at 9 a.m. Chairman, A. B.
Cowan.
Doctoral Examination for Melvin
George Holli, History; thesis: "Hazen
S. Pingree: Urban and Pre-Progressive
Reformer," Fri., Nov. 18, Room 3601
Haven Hall, at 1:30 p.m. Chairman,
Sidney Fine.
Doctoral Examination for Ihn Hwan
Kim Han, Microbiology; thesis: "Pro-
tection of C58 Mice by Normal Murine
Tissues against Transplantable Leuke-
mia, Line Ib," Fri., Nov. 18, Confer-
ence Room, Microbiology, at 2 p.m.
Chairman, A. G Johnson.
Doctoral Examination for Rudolph
Miorton Kalafus, Electrical Engineer-
ing; thesis: "Electromagnetism in Mov-
ing, Conducting Media," Fri., Nov. 18,
Room 2201 East Engineering, at 3 p.m.
Chairman, C. T. Tai.
Doctoral Examination for James
Norman Vedder, Business Administra-
tion; thesis: "Improved Measurement
of State Economic Growth, its Sources
and the Impact of State Economic
Development Programs," Fri., Nov. 18,
Ro.m 816 Business Administration
Bldg., at 3 p.m. Chairman, D. A. Leabo.
Residence Halls Housing: Graduate
and undergraduate students, not now
living in the residence halls, who do
not have a housing commitment for
the Winter Term, 1967, may apply for
housing in Residence Halls at the Of-
fice of University Housing, 3011 SAB.
Events
The following sponsored student
events are approved for the coming
weekend. Sonial chairmen -ri reminded
that reqoests for approval for sociai
events are due in the Office of Student
Organizations not later than 12 o'clock
noon on Wednesday prior to the event.
FRI., NOV. 18--
Acacia, Open-Open; Adams House,
WQ, House Party; Alice Lloyd Hall, TG-
IF; Alen-Rumsey, WQ, TGIF; Allen-
Rumsey, WQ, Open-Open; Alpha Del-
ta Phi, Couples Party; Alpha Gamma
Delta, Theme Party; Alpha Sigma Phi,
Open-Open; Alpha Tau Omega, TGIF;
Alpha Tau Omega, Open-Open; Beta
Theta Pi, Band Party; Chi Phi, TGIF;
Chi Psi, TGIF & Open-Open; Delta
Kappa Epsilon, Lester Maddox Band
Party; Delta Upsilon, TGIF; Delta Up-
silon, Record Party; Evans Scholars,
Open-Open.
Lambda Chi Alpha, TGIF; Phi Ep-
silon Pi, Party; Phi Gamma Delta, Open
Open; Psi Upsilon, Bondage Party; Sig-
ma Alpha Epsilon, Open-Open; Sigma
Alpha Mu, Open-Open; Sigma Chi,
TGIF; Sigma Nu, TGIF & Open-Open;
Sigma Phi, Open-Open; Sigma Pi, Open-
Open; Tau Delta Phi, Party; Tau
Epsilon Phi, Record Party & Open-
Open; Theta Chi, TGIF; Theta Delta
Chi, TGIF; Zeta Beta Tau, Open-
Open; Zeta Tau Alpha, Pledge For-
mal; Prescott, EQ, Party; Alpha Ep-
silon Pi, Open-Open.
SAT., NOV. 19-
Acacia, Toga Party; Allen-Rumsey,
WQ, Open-Open; Alpha Delta Phi, Vi-
king Party; Alpha Sigma Phi, Band
Party & Open-Open; Alpha Tau Ome-

Request Judicial Review
AL B U LLmETINeIn Aid to Education Issue
ga, Open-Open; Beta Theta Pi, Band For further information please call WASHINGTON (/)-Two groups eral relations with the academic
Party; Chi Psi, Pledge Formal; Delta 764-7460, General Division, Bureau ofo nt
Kappa Epsilon, Pledge Formal; Delta Appointments, 3200 SAB. representing over 300 public col- COmmunity.
Upsilon, Band Party; Evans Scholarsleges and universities will press Support to date has been for
Coat and Tie Party & Open-Open; SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: specific academic projects enfor
Kappa Alpha Phi, Party; Kappa Sigma, 212 SAB- Congress for $150 million in
Pledge Formal; Lambda Chi Alpha, - buildings. The colleges and un-
Open-Open; Phi Epsilon Pi, Pledge Dept. of the Navy, Naval Ships sys- across-the-board aid next year. versities want general operational
DlaBaPaty; ems Command, Washington, D.C.- estewatgnrloeainl
Party; Phi GammaDelta, B M. Byrne will interview at the One of them, the Association of support, starting with the sciences.
Lambda Phi, House Party & Open- Engineering School on Nov. 18 for State Colleges and Universities, They propose that $50 million
LabaPi, psilon, tyd&FOrmal. Electronic, Mechanical, Marine Engi-
Open; Psi Upsilon, Pledge Formal.iesrnd Phic ho are graduat 15 joining a move for judicial re- be given the states according to
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Skinflick Par- students, naval architects and civil en- view of the explosive issue of fed- student population. A second $50
ty; Sigma Alpha Mu, Open-Open; Sig- gineers who are juniors or seniors and eral aid to church-related schools. million would go to institutions in
ma Chi, Purple Passion Party; Sigma graduate students. Male or female. In- The resolutions came. Wedne§- proportion to the number of grad-
ma Phi, Open-Open Party; Sigma Pi, Bldge day at the conclusion of a joint uate degrees awarded. The third
Hell's Angels Party; Tau Delta Phi, Davey Tree Expert Co., Kent, Ohio meeting of the state college group $50 million would be dispersed on
Party; Theta Delta Chi, Pledge For- -Mr. Swen will interview students, and the National Association of the basis of existing federal re-
mal; Tau Epsilon Phi, Open-Open; Tau male, Nov. 18 from 10 to 12 and 1:30 State Universities and Land- search grants
Epsilon Phi, Sweetheart Ball; Theta to 5. Outdoor work all summer with
Xi, Open-Open; Triangle, Open-Open; exp.tdra gor ar s ndegwid Grant Colleges. Member institu- The state collegh association de-
Willams WQPary; illimsWQexpert training in tree care and goodThstecolg soiio2d-
Williams, WQeart Wiliams, WQ, salary. tions enroll over 50 per cent of the parted from the joint platform to
Open; Zeta Psi, Pledge Formal; Alpha Camp Mohawk, Wis.-Boys. Interview siX million students in higher edu- support Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-
Epsilon Pi, Open-Open Theme Party; Nov. 21, 10 to 3. Seeks 6 counselors, cation today. NC) in his fight for a law which
Delta Tau Delta, Open-Open. specialists in swimming, sailing. wa-
SUN., NOV. 20 - tersking, riding, archery, arts-crafts, The two associations said that would allow court review of fed-
Betsy Barbou, Open-Open, photography and more. "institutional support is the No. 1 eral aid programs to private edu-
TUES., NOV. 22- International Student Information unmet need in the pattern of fed- cation.
Chi Phi, Thanksgiving Party. Service-Interviews Nov. 22 9-5. An- _ -
_________ ~#swer questions about working in Eu- . .~

- - ---- - - ------ - - - - - - --- -- -------

WILLOW RUN AIR1PORT HOTEL
Located in the Terminal building
at the Willow Run Airport
YPI'SLAN'l'I,MICiIIG-Ai
Award-Winfing Roo s-Comi;;/pcI!) Al odern
All Rooms have TV, Phone, Private Bath
15 MINUTES TO ANN ARBOR
NOW-ADDED SERVICE
Free Limo. Sru it' fronm
Metro. Airport toWIov uiRun
Telephone: HIU 3-5000

Place'ment

'
i
f

ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Federal Service Entrance Examina-
tion-Applications were turned in on'
Oct. 19 for the test tomorrow, Sat.,
Nov. 19, at the Downtown Post Office,
Main St. at Catherine St.
Peace Corps Week Activities - Are
wound up tonight and tomorrow, Sat.
until 3 p.m. Lower Lobby of the Un-
ion office urges those still having
applications out to return them. Of-
Bice open till 10 p.m. tonight.
POSITION OPENINGS:I
Crest Manufacturing Co., Inc., Syos-
sett, L.I., N.Y.-bales careers, main-
tenance items sold to plumbing con-
tractors and institutions, established
territories. New grads, with car invited
to call.
Chippewa County Probate Court,
Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.-Juvenile Pro-
bation Officer, Jan. 1 opening, full
time. Grads in social sciences.
Lucas County Welfare Department,
Ohio Civil Service-Director of Case-I
work Services, exam given Dec. 3, ap-
plications taken until Nov. 21. Grad
of grad social work program, plus 8
yrs. exper. In social work 4 of which
must be in supervisory positions.
Aeroquip Corp., Aircraft Division,
Jackson, Mich.-4 openings. Metal1urgi
cal or welding engr., BS in field,;
min. 1 yr. exper. Industrial Engr., BS
in Ind. Engrg. or ME, min. 2 yrs.
with varied assign. Sr. Product Dev.
Engr., BS in ME or Aeronautical Engrg.
Min. 3 yrs. gen. exper., 1 yr. in fluid
system design. Cargo Control Product
Development Engr., BS in engrg., 1
yr. exper. in cargo handling, pref. 3
yrs., will involve design work.
New York Air Brake Co., Syracuse,
N.Y.-All areas of engineering, requir-
ing the ME or IE and some exper.,
up to 5 yrs. Sales and applications
engrs. N.Y. and midwest and New!
England.
Kellogg Co., Battle Creek, Mich. -
Eight technical positions available, for
BSME B$, BSEE, BSIE, and Chem.
major. 0-3 or 5 yrs. exper.
"All authority Bath
been given unto me in
heaven and on earth."
Matthew 10:32
CHURCH OF CHRIST
530 West Stadium

rope full time in summer.
Miles Laboratories, Elkhart, Ind. -
Jr., Srs. and grads, work in field of
marketing, research, chemistry, quality
control, consumer products, adminis-
tration, services.
Details and applications and ap-
pointments made at Summer Place-
ment Service, 212 SAB.

Let's Take a Break
and
EAT OUT!

JOLEN
creme hleachi
~1
C i CR
Problems fade with
JCB the fabulous
new cosmetic that
bleaches superfluous
hair op face, arms
and legs. In minutes,
medically approved
JCB turns hair blond
to blend with skin
tones. Safe for sen-
sitive skin . . . try
it now!
Giant JCB $5*
Reg. JOB $2*
The
VILLAGE
APOTHE CARY
1 112 S. University

OPEN: Mon., Wed. and Thurs., 4 P.M. to 2 A.M.
OPEN: Fri., Sat., Sun., Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tuesday)
DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE
314- DETROIT ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH.
CARRY-OUT ORDERS ONLY-PHONE 665-2266
FREE DELIVERY
BARBECUE CHICKEN AND RIBS
FRIED.CHICKEN SHRIMP AND FISH

STEAK A D SHAKE
5 1313 South University

Delicatessen Restaurant
Between University Hospital and
St. Joseph Hospital-1030 E. Ann
Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner
FINE AMERICAN FOOD
For a Change Try Our
! HOT PASTRAMI on ONION FOLL
9 HOT CORN BEEF on ONION ROLL
* 3 Decker Pastrami, Corn Beef,
Swiss Cheese, Turkey, Lettuce & Tomato
Hours: Daily 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. CALL FOR
Closed Mondays TAKE-OUT
* TRAY SERVICE for Parties 662-6422

l

CHAR-BROILED
Salad, Potato,
VEAL CUTLET

HAMBURGER STEAK
Bread & Butter..........$1.50

Salad, Potato, Bread & Butter $1.25

L

Old Ileiuf elber
211-213 N. Main St 668-9753
Specializiug iii ER1MAN FOOD,
FINE BEER, WINE, IIQUOR
PARKING LOT ON ASHLEY ST.
Hours: Doily 1 1 A M.-2 A M. Closed Mondays

I I

11

11_

TV Center Programs: On Sun.,
20, the following programs will
their initial telecast on Detroit
tions:

Nov.
have
sta-

OFFICE HOURS
Circulation-764-0558
Complaints-9-11:30
Off ice Hours-i-4
Classified-764-0557
Call between 12:30 and 2:30

PW. -

'i

Outfitters to Ladies
of Traditional Taste
WE'VE GOT
SPIRIT by STEVENS
The luxury stocking
you can afford to run
Mesh......2 pair for $1
Heel & Toe . 2 pair for $1
Cantrece . . .2 pair for $1.50

os} rn
{ fall orte ay n{l
:: ywi>wht<ki seve,$A.r.W ie A-in
regis}r roCuntyrye Cttes
I? I
Absoluely! <
A""iS;'-;. .:f.,;::,, ? ; :,r.:txh. 7. (r. .'
;.... ' #i ::2t :: :.h "..:::. '# k. } ::::: .-. y { ,' { ?r + ,v ,} .
_.,,...r...:x,.".".fa{{"..':;.. Y..a+;:;.v...-:".h~y:::"irr>:P...:.a '.;....::::v:::w y.7
'Z"" '00011 t falls for the navy and look
what happens! Dashing duo featured here is bonded
wool jersey with a glittering watch case trim. Top,
navy with white knit sleeves, $18.00. White A-line
skirt $10.00. Sizes 5-15.
P.S. Only one and a half days left to come in and
register for Country Set Contest,

t ,,

FIRESIDE' LOUNGE

ji --- _.._._ -.._. ...._- . i

3140 Packard

NO 8-7488

SA GA

Aw

Friday Nite Seafood Smorgasbord
FOOD and LIQUOR SERVED
OPEN 0 Mon.-Thurs.-1 1:30-8 P.M.
9 Fri. & Sat.-1 1:30-9 P.M.
* Closed Sunday
Try our BEEF BUFFET SATURDAY after the game.
Served 5-9 P.M. All you can eat $3.25 per person
BAR--open 'til 2 nightly

Chinese and American Restaurant
311 South Main 662-4240

OPEN
OPEN

DAILY-11 A.M. to 1:30 A.M.
SUNDAY-11 A.M. to 10 P.M.

STUDENTS
Now's your chance to get the
THE"GREATES

AV

at South U. Restaurant
For your convenience-open 24 hours daily
0 Carry-out All Week@0 662-4170
Breakfasts-Lunches-Dinners

get the BEST food in town
" PEA PODS *HONG SHU
* CHINESE BEAN CAKES " CURRY POWDER
Order for banquets, parties or any other combinations

40

Lh

11

FAMOUS FOR FINE

i4
c , ,4

0

4

FOR

CHINATOWN ATMOSPHERE

ii

a' a - . a A ] .RjA.W AOSPElE

In nl M I

MW

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