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March 21, 1962 - Image 8

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-03-21

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Xl

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WEDNESDAY, M

AROS:
Kolb Cites Difficulties
n Harnessing H-Bomb

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
-* 1«....... ....,

"I

VOTE for

By JUDITH BLEIER .
Scientists are still "a hell of a
'ng way" from being able to har-
ess the R-bomb'fussion, Alan C.
olb of the Naval Research Lab-
atory said last week.
If this feat is at all achievable,
ie realization might be some 35
ears away, Kolb, who received his
octorate in physics from the Uni-
ersty in 1957, remarked.
ive Loans,
m hlrhip s
By GAIL EVANSr
This past year over two million
llars in scholarships was dis-
ibuted to 5,500. students and
out 9,000 University students
ceived loans, Ivan W. Parker,
cretary of the University Schol-
'ship Committee, said recently.
The University expects to, give
t as many stipends this year,;
e indicated. But every year there
e about 15 scholarships which
> unclaimed. "For many years
ere was an unused scholarship
r American Indians, but now
ialified applicants have been
und," Parker said.
The scholarship office presently
.s one grant for which there
e more funds. It requires that
ie recipients pay back one quar-
r of the stipend within three
ears after graduation. Under-
aduate men in engineering or
isiness administration who plan
go into business or industry are
igible
Another Scholarship
Another scholarship open until
pril 6 which could use more ap-
icants offers a stipend to soph-
nore men with a high leadership
ad academic record. "Need is not
prime directive for this scholar-
up," Parker emphasized.
Often students without a need
ctor don't apply for scholarships
en though they have a high
cord because they think that
eqy wouldn't qualify, Parker in-
.cated,.
Other scholarships for which t
difficult to find qualified appli
cnts are those with local stipula-
ons such as one for a student
;m Des Moines, Iowa, which is
esently without a qualified ap-
licant.
He said that in considering ap-
icants, grade average determines
e order of consideration. Then
ue need factor is checked. Ac-
vities and leadership qualities
e also looked into.
High School Record
When the recipient is to be a
!eshman, weight is placed first
a the high school record for both
ades and types of courses taken.
hen results of aptitude tests are
>nsidered. "More weight is placed
n performance than on poten-
al," Parker indicated.
The need factor is determined
a an evaluation from the College
cholarship Program after review-
g the parent's financial state-
ent. The parental status, number
childre, residence equity, bank
count and investments, student
wings, health factors and how
ose the parents are to retire-
ent are all taken into account.
owever, the University allows a
,000 exemption on savings, so as
0t to penalize thrift, Parker said.
Range of Stipends
The range of stipends for out-
f-state students runs from $50-
1,000. The maximum any student
ceives si $1,500 from some in-
ustry sponsored national schol-
'ship programs.
F6i'eign students are not eligi-
e to apply for University scholar-
uips until after they "have prov-
1 themselves academically dur-
ig a year of study at the Univer-

udic Postpones
urvey Discussion
Women's Judiciary yesterday
id not consider the questionnaires
oncerning changes in women's
ours which it had distributed in
omen's dormitories last week due
an unexpectedly large number
cases it was required to hear,
hairman Deborah Cowles, '62,
id yesterday.

But he also reported a possibly
promising next experimental step
in the field, the use of a device
called Pharos, named for the
world's first lighthouse built by
the ancient Egyptians off Alex-
andria.
Electrical Energy
The new Navy machine dis-
charges electrical energy "equal to
the whole output of the United
States," although it sustains such
output for only 10-millionths of
a second at a time, Kolb said.
However, the Pharos was de-
signed only to power an experi-
ment, and not to produce practi-
cal power, he noted.
"No man anywhere in the world
has anything approaching a ther-
monuclear reactor," Kold told a
news , conference at the spring
meeting of the Optical Society of
America.
Nuclear Energy
Such a device would be one in
which hydrogen atoms would be
fused to produce a sustained re-
lease of nuclear energy which
could be converted to electricity
in a practical way.
Prof. Terry Kammash of the
nuclear engineering department
said that although there are no
experiments currently being work-
ed on at the University in this
direction, a laboratory is being set
up to use for thermonuclear ex-
perimentation.
The laboratory, to be used joint-
ly by the aeronautical, electrical
and nuclear engineering depart'-
ments, will not be put into full
operation before next fall at the
earliest, he said.
Varying Predictions
Prof. Kammash agreed with
Kolb's somewhat pessimistic pre-
dictions. "Most scientists vary in
their opinions of the possibility
of harnessing the hydrogen bomb
reactions.
"Some may tend to be a bit
more optimistic, depending upon
how successful the particular ma-
chines which they are working on
seems to be," he said.
Names
New Leaders
Interfraternity C o u n e i l has
named the chairmen of its eight
committees for the coming year.
Appointments were: Academic
Affairs, Edward J. McCormack,
'64; Alumni Relations, Thomas
Halperin, '64; Fraternity Rela-
tions, Clifford Taylor, '64; Frater-
nity Services, Robert A. Rosen-
berg. '64; Personnel, Steven Link-
er, '64; Publicity, Richard Belger,
'65E; Rushing, Frank, Lude, '64;
Social, Gary Wold, '64.

(Continued on Page 8)
sociated High Frequency Electro-magnet
Radiation," Thurs., March 22, at 3:00
p.m. in Room 246 West Engineering.
This talk is independent of the pre-
vious talks.
Seminar in Mathematical Statistics:
Meets Thurs., March 22 at 4 p.m. in
3201 Angell Hall. Prof. L. J. Savage
will continue his discussion of "Half-
solved Problems in Bayesian Statistics."
Placement
ANNOUNCEMENT:
The Federal. Service Entrance Exam
will be given again on April 14, 1962.
The last date to apply for this exam
is March 29. The exam will be given
during Spring Vacation & the Bureau
has a list of cities where the exam will
be given. There is only one more exam
given after this one (May 12).
POSITION OPENINGS: -
U-S. Naval Training Device Center,
Pt. Washington, N.Y.-Librarian (Cata-
loging-Physical Sci. & Engrg.), BA' in
either Lib. Sci., Physical Sci., Math,
or Engrg. plus 1 yr. of professional lib.
exper. or graduate study in Lib. Sci.
Hevi-Duty Electric Co.o Div. of Basic
Products Cor., Milwaukee, Wis. - Two
openings or Electrical Engnrs. with or.
without sales exper. Willing to train
person who has interest in becoming
Sales Engnr.
Propellair, Div. of Robbins & Meyers,
Inc., Springfield, 0.-Sales Engnr. &
Ass't. to Manager of Industrial Air
Products Divs. Engrg. degree & mini-
mum of 5 yrs. exper: with industrial
air products.
Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis, Ind. -
Woman for position as Cataloger. Fifth-
yr. Library Sci( degree with scientific
bkgd. Cataloging exper. desirable.
ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER-
VIEWS-Seniors & grad students please
sign interview schedule at 128-H West
Engrg.:
MARCH 22 (a.m.)-
Amco Chemicals Corp., Marketing -
Chicago, Ili.-BS-MS: ChE. Also MBA
grads. who have undergrad degrees in
Chem. & ChE. June & Aug. grads. Sales
Q Mkt.
Analytic Services, Inc., Alexandria,
Va. (Wash., D.C. Met. area)-All De-
grees: AE & Astro., ChE, EE, ME &
Nuclear. MS-PhD: CE. BS: E Math, E
Physics & Sci Engrg. Both Men &
Women. R. & D.
Food Machinery & Chemical Divs.,
N.Y., N.J., Md., W. Va., Kansas, Wyo.
& Calif.-BS-MS: ChE. June & Aug.
grads. R. & D., Sales & Prod. & Process.
MARCH 22-23-
General Tire & Rubber Co., Aerojet-
General Corp., Azusa, Downey, Sacra-
mento. San Ramon-(Nucleonics), & El
Monte-(Space General), Calif.-All De-
grees: AE & Astro., ChE, EE, EM, Instr't.,
ME, Met. & Nuclear. MS-PhD: CE. BS-
MS: Mat'ls. Prof.: Applied Mech. June
& Aug. grads. Both Men & Women.
Summer ,Employment: Prs. & Grad'stu-
dents sign special group meeting sched-
ule for 4:30 in Rm. 3B, Mich. Union.
Des., R. & D., Prod., Analysis, Quality
Control, Test, Computer (Pirog.), Re-
liability.
Film & open discussion at Rm. 3B,

Mich. Union, 8:00 p.m. on Mar. 22 & 23.
MARCH 22-
Mobay Chemical Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.
location & New Martinsville, W. Va. lo-
cation-All Degrees: ChE. BS-MS: EE
& ME. June & Aug. grads. Summer Em-
ployment: Sign regular schedule. Des.,
R. & D., Sales & Prod.
National Castings Co., All Div. & Sub-
sidiaries-Entire U.S.A.-BS: EM, IE,
ME & Met. June & Aug. grads. Des.,
R. & D., Sales & Prod.
MARCH 22-23-
North American Aviation, Inc., Atom-
ics International, Canoga Park, Calif.
-All Degrees: ChE, EE, EM, ME & Met.,
Nuclear. Prof.: Applied Mech. BS: E
Physics. BS-MS: Mat'ls. June & Aug.
grads. Both Men & Women. Des., R. &
D., Nuclear Sci. & Engrg.
Autonetics Div., Los Angeles-& Orange
Counties, Calif. Computers & Data
Systems, Research & Dev., Inertial Nav-
igation, Armament & Flight Controls-
All Degrees: EE. MS-PhD: ChE & ME.
BS: E Physics. Both Men & Women.
Summer Employment: Limited to grad.
Des., R. & D., Sales & Prod.
Columbus Div., Columbus, O. - All
Degrees: EE. BS: E Math. Both Men &
Women. Des., Rt. & D.
Los Angeles Div-All Degrees: AE &
Astro., EE, EM, & Met. Prof.: Applied
Mech. BS: E Math. June & Aug. grads.
Both Men & Women. Des., R. & D.
North American Aviation, Inc., Rock-
etdyne Div., Canoga Park, Calif. - All
Degrees: AE & Astro., ChE, CE, EE, EM,
Instru., Met. & Nuclear. Prof.: Applied
Mech. ES: E Math, E Physics & Sci.
Engrg. June & Aug. grads. Both Men
& Women. R. & D..
Space & Information Systems Div.,
Downey, Calif.-Al Degrees: AE '& As-
tro., EE, EM, Instru., ME & Nuclear.
Prof.: Applied Mech. MS: Commu. Sci.
BS-MS: IE & Mat'ls. MS-PhD: ChE.
ES: E Math & E Physics. June & Aug.
grads. Both Men & Women. Des., R. &
D.
MARCH 22-
Republic Steel Corp., Central Alloy
District, Canton & Massillon, O. - BS:
ChE, EE, IE, ME & Met. Co. Physical
recouired. Dev. & Prod.
U.S. Gov't., Air Force Logistics Com-
mand, Wright-Patterson AFB, Dayton,
O.-BS: CE, EE, IE & ME. Prod.
TEACHING INTERVIEWS:
Beginning Mon., March 26, the fol-
lowing schools will interview candi-
dates for the 1962-1963 school year.
MON., MARCH 26-
Jackson, Mich. (Jackson County Spec.
Educ.)-Sp. Corr., Visit. Teach, Type A,
Type C Consultants.
Wyandotte, Mich.-Elem., Ment. Re-
tard.,.Gen. Sci., Math, Home Ec., Span.,
Elem. Vocal/Inst. Music.
Aurora, 111.-Elem.; Visit. Teach, EMH,
Sp. Corr.; Jr. HS Lang. Arts/SS or
Span., Math; HS Math, SS (Geog),
Engl., Latin, German-afternoon only.
Glencoe, 1.-Elem., 7 & 9 Lang. Arts/
SS.
Oak Park, Ill.-(K-8)-Elem.; Jr. HS
Lang. Arts, Math, Sci., Libr., Span.,
Art, PE (Boy's & Girl's), Couns., Vis.
Handi., Hard of Hear.
Sayville, L-I., N.Y.-Elem., Art, Wom-
en's PE, Nurse/Teach.; HS French,

Couns. Jr. HS Voc Mus., Modern Lang.
(French pfd.).
TUES., MARCH 27-
Lincoln Park, Mich.-Elem., Sec. 7-12
Math, French, Span., Engl., Girl's PE,
nd. Arts, Home Ec., Gen. Se.; Elem.
Vocal, Elem. Inst., Art, .Sp. Corr., Visit.
Teach., Hard of Hearing, Ment. Retard.,
Psychologist.
Daly City, Calif.-K-6;
Palo Alto, Calif.-Elem. & Sec.
Oak Lawn, I1.-Elem.; Jr. HS Math,
Set., Lang. Arts, Sp. Corr., Deaf.
'Bedford, 0.-Elem., Jr. HS Engl/SS,
Gen. Sci., Math, Engl., Ind. Arts, Art,
Band; HS Engl., Bus. Ed., Speech/
Hear., SS/Hist.; Sp. Ed., Gifted, Slow
Learn., Elem. Art, Elem. Vocal, Coach
with academic field.
Milwaukee, Wis. - Elem., Sp. Ed.,
Women's PE, & All Fields.
WED., MARCH 28-
Adrian, Mich. (Lenawee County) -
Spec. Educ.
Marshall, Mich.-Fields not listed.
Monroe, Mich. (Jefferson Schs.) -
Elem.; Jr. HS SS, St., Engl., Art; HS
Engl., Math, Ind. Arts, Comm.; Sp.
Corr., Ment. Retard.
Mt. Clemens, Mich. - Elem., Elem.
Voc. Elem., Sp. Corr.; Jr. HS St.. Math,
SS/Engl., Girl's PE-afternoon only.
Highland Park, Ill.-Girl's PE (Sports,
Dance), Biol., Phys. Se., Fre., Span.,
Asst. Libra, Amer. Gov't., Soc./Econ.,
Engl., Math, Home Ec.
Clarence, N.Y.-Elem., Elem. Libr.,
Elem. Read.; Jr. HS Math, Core., Guid.;
aS Engl., Phys/Chem. or Biol. or Math,
Gen. Bus., Bus., Span., Fre., Blot., Jr.
& HS Vocal.
Pittsford, N.Y.-Elem., Spec. Class,
Elem. PE (Women); Jr. HS Libr., Math,
9th grade Engl.; HS 10th gr. Engl., 10th
gr. Hist., Gen. Sci./Biol.,*Span/Fre., Ind.
Arts/Dr. Ed.-afternoon only.
* * o
List to be continued in tomorrow's
D.O.B.
For additional information contact
the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB,
663.1511, Ext. 3547.
SUMMER PLACEMENT:
212 SAB-
The Detroit Edison Co.-Will Inter-
view between 9:00 a.m. & noon on
Thurs., March 29. Juniors in Liberal
Arts interested in mgmt. may apply.
Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield
Village, Dearborn, Mich.-Positions for
men & women in Food Service Dept.
Interview period is April 18-25 be-
tween 1:30 & 4:30 p.m.
Detroit Civil Service Commission -
Positions for College grads as Super-
vising Camp Cbunselors.
Explorers' Caravan-Boy's Traveling
Camp,'New York. Looking for male
counselors.
Come to Summer Placement fcr fur-
ther information.
Part-Time
Employment
The following part-time jobs are
available. Applications for these jobs
can be made in the Part-time Place-

ment Office, 2200 Student Activities
Building, during the following hours:
Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. til 12 noon
and 1:30 til 5 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring students
for part-time or full-time temporary
work, should call Bob Hodges at NO
3-1511. ext. 3553.
Students desiring miscellaneous odd
jobs should consult the bulletin board
in Room 2200, daily.
MALE
1-Graduate student with background
in Immunology or closely related
area such as Immuno-Chemistry or
even Bio-Chem. with interest in
Immunology.
3-Caretakers in exchange for apart-
ment on campus.
--Several salesmen wanted.
1-With programming ability plus fast,
accurate keypunch skills.
-Experienced Electronic Technicians
with good academic record prefer-
red. Must be able to design and
build electronic circuit and related
equipment.
FEMALE
1-Graduate student with background
in Immunology or closely related
area such as Immuno-Chemistry or
even Bio-Chem. with interest 'in
Immunology.
1--With programming ability plus fast,
accurate keypunch skills.
1--Baby sitter who will help through
the dinner hour in exchange for
room and board.
-Several saleswomen wanted.
ORGAN IZATION
NOTICES
Chess Club, Final Round of U. of M.
Chess Tournament, Mar. 21, 7:30 p.m.,
Union, Rms. 3KLMN. Spectators wel-
come.
* * *
German Club, Coffee Hour, German
Conversation & Music, Singing, Mar.
21, 2-4 p.m., 4072 FB (lounge opposite
elevator). "Herzlich willkommen!"
Ullr Ski Club, Last Chance for Aspen
Trip Meeting, Mar. 21, 7:30 p.m., Union.
Read
Daily
Classif ieds,

STEVE TAYLOR'
(WRITE-IN CANDIDATE

FOR SGC)

"A VOICE FOR THE

INDEPENDENT OR AFFILIATED

CONSERVATIVE "

MEMBER OF
SIGMA NU FRATERNITY

11

SEMINAR:
CREATIVE ARTS:
AROUND, THE WORLD
in connection with
CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL
presented by-
the International Committee
of the Michigan Union

I

MARCH 22 at 4:15 P.M.
featuring
PROFESSOR D. B. GOOCI
along with foreign students from
Germany, Africa, England
3 K & L of the Michigan Union

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