; r s. THE MICHIGAN nAlr.w nnTsI'Tri 0 W% A!'T TA ITIT A" 4% A, AA t.. iTUV L' ~ii fl fH1A 1 LEiATKW " THURSDK~LAY, JANUIARY 30, 1964 A: r- - -K Across Campus Prof. Richard W. Jones of Northwestern U n i v e r s it y will speak on "Homeostasis Feedback or Adaptation?' at 4 p.m. today in Rm. 311 of the West Engineering Bldg. Prosodic Pattern ... Prof. Roman Jakobson of Har- vard University and the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology will speak on "Slavik Prosodic Pattern and its Evolution" at 4:10 p.m. today in Aud. A. Public Finance ... Prof. E. Cary Brown of the Uni- versity of Chicago will speak on "Empirical Research in Public Fi- nance and Its Implications for Fiscal Policy" at 4:15 p.m. today in Rm. 101 of the Economics Bldg. Administration ... Mark S. Massel of the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., will speak on "Legal and Econ- omic Problems of Regulatory Ad- ministration" at 8 p.m. today in the East Conference Rm. of Rack- ham.- SNCC... The University Friends of SNCC will hold a mass meeting at 8 p.m. today in Rm. 3C of the Michigan Union. 'A Taste of Honey' TOOpenCOLLEGE ROUNDUP: , Universities To Pool Resources ,' WASHINGTON - Presidents of five universities in Washington have set up a program to pool their graduate school resources. A student enrolled at American, Catholic, Georgetown, G e o r g e Washington or Howard universi- ties now will be able to take courses at any of the other four. *~ * * BERKELEY-The University of California, if its regents get their way, will be on the quarter system beginning in 1966. The switchover will be made if the state's edu- cation coordinating council ap- proves and if the legislature ap- propriates enough funds to main- tain standards of quality. MADISON-Student-faculty ef- forts at the University of Wiscon- sin to give all campus fraternities and sororities local autonomy are receiving an affiliate counter- attack on two fronts. An. organization of Wisconsin affiliate alumni-the "Wisconsin Conference"-has been started to "insure the preservation of the fraternity system" there. It has asked each national to contribute $100. The alumni fear that local chap- ters will be required to disaffiliate completely from nationals and that Greek organizations are being required to prove they do not dis- FAYETTE, Ia.-A guaranteed criminate instead of university four-year basic cost plan to cover authorities having to prove that tuition and fees has been adopted they do. by the Upper Iowa University At the student level, Inter- Board of Trustees. Fraternity and Panhellenic As- The plan, which guarantees en- sociation leaders are urging that tering freshmen that their basic Wisconsin delegate to them the college expenses will not, increase responsibility for achieving local during their four years, will go autonomy. This power now rests into effect next September. with the student-faculty Commit- The guaranteed cost plan will tee on Human Rights which is at- apply only to students living in tempting to remove possible dis- university housing and will cover criminatory influences on mem- such general expenses as tuition, bership selection. standard fees, room and board. h i POLISH DANCERS--Anstazia Wojick and Miroslav Fabisiak perform "Songs and Dances from Lublin," a part of the repertoire of the Mazowsze Dance Company which will appear at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Aud. This program is a part of the University Musi- cal Society's Choral Union series. -Daily-James House SOCIAL DRAMA--John Haber and Linda Kesler, '66, stair in the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre's production of "A Taste of Honey" by Shelagh Delaney at 8 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. IQC ASSEMBLY ASSOCIATION presents DICK GREGORY (From the Back of the Bus) in concert with Addiss and, Crofut Saturday, Feb. 1,8:30 P.M. Hill Auditorium Tickets: $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 Tickets on sale today through Friday Noon-5 P.M. at Hill Aud. r *::.444..4. 4.4...44.. . t,.. :' ~ .: : 4,r.ti'M ".5' 4A; ::n:,.5~... . ..... ««. - .... ... .. *...* $t v°. ""vY.. }?}K'x'r. ...vc ' p d~r'" 'n. r X. .. 5 ..... . r.. ...... .J......... .. ...... ..n....... ..F.. v........J... ..... .svvt~,. Y.. ...v.Fn ....:'. r. F ...n, ... .. ... .. : .{ fi.4, ... ntr'ro': r:,F.. ::.,."." ". ".... .... .. ..n ........... DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .. s .... .. .t. . x.r{S v , fl,.. ......v.44.t. .~..1 .... r Cn .. . 4 51 'V. r . .. . J .... . .. . . .4.,..N 4 . . ..4....: .. .. . . ...,..... f.........:.......... .n .. . . . ......... J44444.*4444444. 4..:v>4 v:,4v...;..4:~44:4...4.v..... . .}.VA.Vg.V4W:.:.....444«u::.....4.4444fl4 44. 44.*44. I i I The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room3564 Administration Build- ng before 2 p.m. of the day pre- ceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30 Day Calendar Institute of Continuing Legal Edu- cation Lecture Series-Complete Uni- form Commercial Code Program: Rack- ham Bldg., 9 a.m. Mental Health Research Institute Lecture-Donald C. Schreffler, Research Associate, Dept. of Human Genetics, "The Informational Roles of Gene and Antigen in the Control of Antibody Structure and Specificity": Main Con- ference Room, Mental Health Research Institute, 2:15 p.m. Slavic Languages and Lit. Lecture - Roman Jakobson, Prof., Harvard Univ. and Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology;, "Slavic Prosodic Pattern and Its Evolution": Aud. A, Angell 'Hall, 4:10 p.m. Cinema Guild - Wajda's "Kanal" (Grand Prize, Cannes): Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m. Univ. Musical Society Choral Union Concert - Mazowsze Dance Company: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. Applied Mathematics Seminar, Mathe- matics 849g- Prof. H. M. Nussenzveig, Courant Institute will speak on "The Physical Interpretation of Regge in Non-Relativistic Scattering Theory," in Room 246 West Engin. at 3 p.m. Coffee will be served in Room 350 West Engin. at 2:30 p.m. Bioengineering Seminar-Richard W. Jones, Northwestern Univ. will lecture on the topic: Homeostasis, Feedback or Adaptation? At 4 p.m. in West Engin. 311. Chrysler Corp. will present a pro- gram on amphibious vehicles at 4 p.m. in Room 1042 East Engin. The program will include three films and a discus- sion period conducted by three mem- bers of Chrysler's engin. staff.' Dept. of Economics and Economics Society Lecture-Prof. E. Cary Brown, Ford Foundation Visiting Prof., Univ. of Chicago, will speak on "Empirical Research in Public Finance and Its Dial 2-6264 NOW THRU SATURDAY Shows at 1:00-215 4:25-6:40 and 9:00. Implications for Fiscal Policy," in Room 101, Economics Bldg. at 4:15 p.m. Personnel Techniques Seminar No. 111 -Dr. William M. Sattler will speak on "How to Improve Supervisory Com- munication Skills," in the Michigan Union at 8:30 a.m. Doctoral Examination for Ivan Walter Olson, Music; thesis: "The Roots and Development of Public School Music in Richmond, Virgiana, 1782-1907," 106 Lane Hall at 9 a.m. Doctoral Examination for Willa Lis- ette Koenig, Education; thesis: "Judg- ments of Deans of Women Regarding Their Actual and Their Ideally Con- ceived Roles," 4019 UHS, at 1 p.m. General Notices Admission Test for Graduate Study in Business: Candidates taking the Ad- mission Test for Grad Study in Busi- ness on Sat., Feb. 1, are requested to re- port to Room 130 Business Admin. Bldg. at 8:45 on Sat. morning. Botany 101 Makeup for Final Exam: Tues., Feb. 4, 7 p.m. Room 2004 Natural Science. Regents' Meeting: Thurs., Feb. 27- Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than Feb. 13. Language Exam for Master's Degree in History, Fri., Feb. 7, 4-5 p.m., 451 Mason Hall. Dictionaries may be used. Sign the list posted in the History Office, 3601 Haven Hall. Student Government Approval of the following student-sponsored activities becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All publicity for these events must be withheld un- til the approval has become effective. Economics Society, Lecture by E. Cary Brown, Jan. 30, 4:15 p.m., Econ. 101. Young Democrats, Speech by Peter Darrow, Washtenaw County Democratic chairman, Jan. 30, 7 p.m., Union 3D. Seventh-day Adventist Student Assoc., ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered organizations only. Organizations who are planning to be active for the Spring Semester should be registered by Fb. 7, 1964. Forms available, 1011 Student Activities Bldg. American Society for Public Admin- istration, Coffee Hour following speak- er, Jan. 30, 8 p.m., Rackham Bldg., E. Conf. Rm. Speaker: M. S. Massel, Sr. Staff Member, Brookings Inst., Wash- ington, D.C.: "Legal & Economic Prob- lems of Regulatory Administration." Baptist Student Union, Reception for Ed. Seabough, Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 30, 8 p.m., Union, Rm. 3Z. Cerce Francais, Le Baratin, Jan. 30, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FE. U. of M. Friends of SNC, Mass meet- ing, Jan. 30, 8 p.m., Union, Rm. 3. Speaker: Tom Hayden, "The Future of the Civil Rights Movement." Young Democrats, General meeting - Election of new club chairman & ad- ministrative vice-chairman, Jan. 30, 7:30 p.m., Union, Rm. 3D. Speaker: Peter Darrow, Washtenaw County chair- man. Young Republicans, Jan. 30, 8 p.m., Union, Rm. 35. Speaker: Rep. Gilbert Bursley. Cong. Disc. E & R Student Guild, Mid-week Worship, Jan. 30, 12:10 p.m., Douglas Memorial Chapel. Christian Science Organization, Testi- many Meeting, Jan. 30, 7:30 p.m., 528D SAB. DIAL 8-6416 Endsht IS onigh PEXTRAORDINARY" -Time Magazine Lecture by Dr. C. W. Becker, Feb. 15, 4 EDUCATION DIVISION: p.m., 528D, SAB. Beginning Mon., Feb. 3, the follow- Conference on the University, Feb. ing schools will have representatives at 21, 22, Mich. Union & SAB. the Bureau to interview candidates for Seventh-day Adventist Student Assoc., the 1964-1965 school year, lectures, March 21 and April 11, 4 MON., FEB. 3- p.m., 528D SAB. Garden Grove, Calif. (Garden Grove Union High School) - Civics, Econ., Geog., Engl., French, Sciences, Elec- Plaeem ent tronics, Math. ANNOUNCEMENTS: Long Beach, Calif.-Elem. 1-6; Lib., Radcliffe College-Summer Secretarial Outdoor Ed., Spec. Ed.-Ment. Ret., Schl fromCJue7-um.r7eCores aDeaf, Ortho., Sec.-Art, Bus. Ed., Dist. School from June 17-Aug. 7. Courses Ed., Engl., Spanish, French, German; in E-Z Alphabetic Shorthand Simpli- Russian, Home Ec., nd. Arts; Lib., Mu fied, Typewriting, Transcription, Of- sic, Math, Girls" E, Biol. Si., Phys. fice Machines & Secretarial Practice. Sci., Soc. ./Engl., Read., Ment. Ret, The course will be supervised and staff- Deaf. ed by the faculty of Hickox Secre- Suffield, Conn.-Tentative - Elem. tarial Sch. For further info. write to: 1-6, Lib.; Girls FE gr. 4-7; Boys FE The Appointment Bureau, Radcliffe gr. 4-7; Sec. Guid. (woman); Elem. College, Cambridge 38, Mass. Guid.; Sci. gr. 8 & 9; Soc. St. gr. 8-12; Univ. of North Dakota - Various Math/Sci. gr. 7; Engl/Soc. St. gr. 7; Scholarships, Fellowships & Graduate Art. Teaching Assistantships available. For Bloomfield Hills, Mich. (Cranbrook)- infor. & application forms write to: Men only; Spanish, Math, Biol., Eng- Dean of the Graduate Sch,, Univ. of lish. North Dakota, Grand Forks, N. D. TUES., FEB. 4- Univ. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee-An- G nounces Francis C. & Gardner P. Stick- Birmingham, Mich.-Elem. K-6, Lib., ney Scholarship awards. Offered to Art, Vocal, French, Spec. Ed., V.T., seniors and grad students in the follow- Read.; J.H. - Home Ec., Sci., Dev. ing fields: Anthro., Commerce, Econ., Read.; .J.H./S H.-Engl., French/Span- Educ., Eng., Geog., Hist., Poli. Sci., ish; Sec.-Ind. Arts, Art, Engl/W. Hist., Psych., Social Work & Soc. Stipends Math. range up to $750 per semester. Appli- Huntington, N.Y.-Elem. 1-6; Vocal cations must be filed by Feb. 15. Con- Music; Sec.-Engl., Fr,, Span., Russ, tact: Office of Financial Aids Room Latin, Math, Art, nd. Arts, Guid., 105, Univ. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Read., iLb.; J.H. Gen. Sci.; J.H. Gen. Milwaukee, Wis. 53211. Music. Illinois Institute of Technology, Chi- WED., FEB. 5- cago-Undergrad research participation Park Forest, Ill. (Rich Twp. H.S.)- in Biology during summer of '64. Will Vocal Music (Male); Biol/Chem.; Math be expected to work in the research (Modern); Math/Chem.; Girls' PE. labs for 400 hrs. during 9 or 10 weeks. THURS., FEB. 6- Research areas will be biochem., micro- Ciappaqua, N.Y.-Elem. 1-5, 6th gr, biol., bacti., & embryo. Stipend is $600 Math/Sci.; J.H.--Math/Sci.; Engl., Soc. for the research period. In addition, St; H.S.-Phys. Sci./Earth/Chem., Math the student will receive 8 hrs. of cred- it from Ill. Institute of Tech. in under- -gr. 9 & 10, Bus. Ed. grad research, tuition free. Applicant Sci.;EKang., FrN.Y.-Elem.; Sec.-Math; should have completed 3 yrs. of college. i; E ag, l. G Drm,. N 4Span, In addition to biology, must have some Villa Park, Ill. (Dist. No. 45)-K-8, courses in math, physics, & chem. ToJ.H. Spansh/French; Sp. Corr apply: 1) Send in letter listing courses FRI., FEB. 7- & grades. 2) Have 2 or 3 recommenda- White Plains, N.Y.-Elem K-6, Ment. tions from teachers. Apply by March Ret.; J.H.-Math, Gen. Set., Fr., Span., 15. Apply to: Dr. L. R. Hedrick, chair- Home Ec.; Sec.-Engl., Soc. St., Earth man, Biology Dept., Illinois Institute Sci., Chem., Biol., Math, Bus. Ed., of Tech., Chicago 16, Ill. Span., Ind. Arts, Art, Girls PE. Univ. of Calif., Los Alamos Scientific Lab. - Postdoctoral research appoint- Make appointments about one week ments in science & engrg. Young men in advance, or women who are U.S. citizens & who For appointments and additional in- have received the PhD within 3 yrs. formation contact the Bureau, 3200 preceding appointment are eligible to SAB, Ext. 3547. apply. Facilities available in following fields: Physics, Chem., Metallurgy, En- ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- grg., Biology, Indust. Hygiene, & Math. VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please Applications available at Bureau of Ap- sign interview schedule at 128-H West pointments, 3200 SAB. Engrg. for appointments with the fol- lowing: SUMMER PLACEMENT: JAN. 30-31- 212 SAB- Applied Physics Lab. (of The JohnsI Camp Douglas Smith, Mich.-Will in- Hopkins Univ.), Greater Washington, terview Thurs., Jan. 30 beginning at D.C.-All Degrees: EE. BS: E Math, E 10 a.m. Coed camp with positions it Physics & Set. Engrg. R. & D., Des., arts & crafts, admin. ass't., sr. counse- Space & Missile prog.: Electronic des.; lors, head & ass't. cooks & canoeing, engrg.-analysis; performance eval. & Camp Libbey, Toledo Girl Scouts, Arthur Andersen & Co., Det., Chicago, Ohio-Will interview Fri., Jan. 31 at N.Y., Cleveland, Milwaukee, etc.-All 1:30. Positions open for: ass't. dir., CIT diag. of large missile systems. leader, bus. mgr., dietitian, cooks, nurse, degrees: IE. Operations Res., Prod., & waterfront dir.. & ass't., & unit staff. , 3 r l L l Inventory vontrol w/a public acc't, firm. JAN. 30- Battelle Institute, Res. Labs. at Co- lumbus, Ohio-All Degrees: AE & Astro., ChE, E, EM, Mat'ls., ME, Met. & Phys- ics. MS-PhD: Chem.-(Inorg. & Physi- cal), Math & Bacteriology, Commun. Sci., Nuclear. PhD: Instrumentation, Chem.-(Analyt.), iBochemistry. Prof.: Applied Mech's. BS: E Physics & Sci. Engrg. R. & D. Cooper-Bessemer Corp., Mt. Vernon, Ohio & Grove City, Pa.-BS-MS: IE & ME. Dec. & May grads. R. & D., Des., Prod. & Sales.f Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., Ind. Eng. Div., Pittsburgh, Pa., Cleveland, Ohio, & Detroit; Prod. Dept.-Pgh. & Cleveland; Res. & Dev., Tech. Serv. - Pittsburgh-All Degrees: ChE, EE & Met. BS-MS: CE, IE, ME. MS-PhD: Instrumentation. BS: E Physics & Sci. Engrg. MS: Construction. R. & D., Prod., Ind. Engrg., Met., Tech. Serv- ices. Mechanical Handling Systems, Inc., Det.-(Prod. Res. Q Dev., Sales), De- troit, Mich.; & throughout the U.S.-All Degrees: ME. BS-MS: CE. BS: EE, EM, & IE, Mat'is. R. & D., Des., Prod. & Sales. Xerox Corp., Exploratory & Design Dev., Fundamental & Applied Res., Ma- chine & Chem. Process Mfg.-All De- grees: ChE, EE, EM, All Phases of Chem. & Physics. MS-PhD: Instrumentation & Met. BS-MS: IE & ME. BS: E Physics. R. & D., Des., Prod. U.S. Patent Office, Washington, D.C. -BS-MS: AE & Astro., ChE, CE, EE, EM, IE, ME, Met., Org. Chem. & Phys- ics. BS: E Physics & Sci. Engrg. MS: Nuclear, Patent Examining. JAN. 31- . Emerson Electric Mfg. Co., St. Louis & other Emerson facilities on a corp. level-BS-MS: EE. BS: IE & ME. R. & D., Des., Prod. Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy, Lincoln Lab., Lexington, Mass.- All Degrees: EE. MS-PhD: Instrumen- tation, ME & Applied Math. PhD: Phpsics. R. & D., EE-(Radar, anten- nas, solid state devices, R-F circuitry, analog circuit design). Math-(com- puters & prog.). Melpar, Inc., Res. & Dev. Labs. in Northern Va. located in the Greater Washington, D.C., area-MS-PhD: AE & Astro., Meteor., Chem.-(all phases), Physics, Math, Bacteriology & Biochem. All Degrees: EE. R. & D., Des. - Pullman-Standard, Hammond & Mich- igan City, Ind.; & Chicago, Ill.-BS-MS: CE, EE, EM, IE, Mat'is., ME. BS: Sci. Engrg. R. & D., Des., Prod. & Sales. Stewart-Warner Corp., Alemite/In- strument Div, Chicago; Electronics Div., Chicago; S. Wind. Div., Indianapolis - BS: BE, IE & ME. R. & D., Des., Prod. Wyandotte Chemicals Corp., Wyan- dotte, Mich.-BS-MS: ChE. BS: IE & Mat'Is. Prod., Sales, Mat'ls. Engrg. n d FACULTY, Il Placement Interviews for January and June Graduates will be held tomorrow, January 31, 1964 for positions on Pull man-Standard's Engineering Training Program. Additional information is available at the office of the Director of Placement. The time to plan your career is now. If you are a senior engineer, we suggest that you visit the placement office now. ;rl STUDENTS ai D ial 662-8871 for Cinema ud/4 Program Information U m 11 Ui Those students interested in working on the following committees and boards of Student Government Coun- cil should call NO 3-0553 before 1 f j 1 't } Friday, January 31 Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Mich. - Looking for college women over 18 for guides. Need students with foreign languages especially. Also girls with or- gan-playing ability to play in the Martha-Mary Chapel. For further information, please come to 212 SAB. Committee on Student Activities Committee on Student Concerns Committee on University Affairs Committee on USNSA A TASTE of HONEY WA~LDISEY NEWSTANO MOST HILARIOUS ALL-CARTOON FEATURE $un - y DIAL 5-6290 IT'S GOT WHAT IT 'TAKES TO BE HELD OVER- and definitely will be! Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9:05 P.M. Feature 8 Minutes Later GrY, Audrey GrantHepburn Tonight Through Saturday Night Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre 8:00 P.M. Tickets Available at Box Office I Cinema Guild ---- I r!, - -- i Human Relations Board Public Relations Board ' I i r,,,AD MIXERk Iv. Captain Walter R. Hauck, Marine Corps Officer Selection Officer for the State of Michigan, will visit the University of Michigan on the 3rd, 4th and 5th of Februtiry, 1964.eWhile at the University of Michigan, he plans to interview those students interested in obtaining a Marine Corps commission. At present, limited vac- ancies exist for both ground and aviation training. The Platoon Leaders Class Program is available for freshmen, while the Platoon Leaders Class Aviation Program is available for freshmen, sophomores and juniors. Seniors may participate in the Aviation Officer I VFW Hall 314 E. Liberty FRIDAY, JANUARY 31 I I flyMUEI; 0' 10 D AA C, Pti -a P-% P- i 1VeN 14 i i { -:_ '! I iiY - I I l_ h' IV _ gain or ur ' I I !