PAGE ETGHT THE MICHIGAN DAUX trTITTUCIMAW "Aw *n yndon PAGE EIGHT TU1~a .a ~f liM!CWaiEAN 'fLAly fWWf C la'p-- u TilURSDAY, MAY 17, 1962 III I DISCRIMINATION: Detroit .Group Uncovers Segregation in Schools Racial segregation and discrim- ination in teacher placement was found to exist in the Detroit pub- lic school system by the Citizens' Advisory Committee on Equal Ed- ucational Opportunities after a two year study of the situation. The committee made 154 rec- ommendations to the Board of Ed- ucation concerning race relations, free physical and mental-health examinations, and expanded pro- grams in various academic and cultural fields. Annual racial counts of teach- ers and students, more liberal transfer policies and free sum- mer-school classes for children who flunk are among 91 recom- mendations already adopted by the Board. Davrath To Talk At Israeli Event Ephraim Davrath, Israeli consul in Chicago, will speak at a pro- gram celebrating the 14th anni- versary of Israel at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Amph. Also on the program is the showing of the mo- vie, "The Wilderness of Zin' and program of Israeli songs. !u School Superintendent Samuel M. Brownell said that the annual racial count would provide "fac- tual information on which to an- swer inquiries (about) the racial composition of pupils and staff (and). these inquiries are fre- quent." The school system has not taken a racial count of students since the 1920's and of its personnel since the 1940's. The advisory committee found that in February, 1961, 45.6 per cent of the students in Detroit schools were Negroes. A census taken by Brownell early this year showed that 2,472 of the 10,797 teachers in the system are Negro and indications were that the number of Negro students had in- creased also. Easier To Transfer The more liberal transferrpolicy will make it easier for Negro stu- dents to transfer to schools outside their segregated neighborhood which may offer them better in- struction. The free summer-school courses will be limited to students who failed similar courses during the regular school year or those who clearly need remedial work. A long-range goal is to make all summer-school programs free. Sees G-29 As Possible Medical Aid A new anesthetic, called G-29, may be the first in a series of intravenous drugs that may prove ideal for office surgery, predicted' Dr. Guenter Corssen, anesthesiol- ogist at the University Medical Center. The non-barbiturate drug has been used on over 600 patients' from four weeks to 96 years old. "Surgical anesthesia is produced in 15 to 30 seconds, lasting a pre- dictable length of time after which1 the patient quickly awakens. The patient has no hangover, dizziness or nausea and has relief from pain for a considerable per- iod after he wakes up," Corssen said. G-29 is a unique anesthetic be- cause it stimulates breathing, heart action, and blood pressure. These conditions generally prove helpful to patients being operated upon,uhe explained. The drawbacks to this drug are now being studied. One of these is an occasional irritation that arises at the point of injection. Corssen predicted that until these problems are solved, "wide- spread use of the agent cannot safely be recommended." Six To Serve on Joint Judie Six persons have been named to serve as members of joint judiciary council. They are Erwin Adler, '63, Hal Frazier, '64, Joyce Knopow, '64, Lawrence Schwartz, '63, Susan Watson, '63, one year terms, and Patricia Golden, '63, a one semes- ter term. Appointments were made by the interviewing board of joint judic. and are effective immediately. Name Warwick As YD Chairman Mal Warwick, '63, yesterday was elected chairman of Young Demo- crats for next year. William Shell, '64, was chosen vice-chairman; Deborah Gould, '65, secretary; Michael Miselman, '64, treasurer; Rochelle Komer, '65, Harold Mac- Donald, '63, state central commit- tee delegates; and Paul Heil, '63, Herb Schwartz, '64, alternate state central committee delegates. (Continued from Page 4) May 17, at 3:00 p.m. in 247A West Engi- neering. Doctoral Examination for Anthony John Gregory, Instrumentation Engi- neering; thesis: "Time Domain Method of Design for a Class of Nonlinear Sys- tems," Thurs., May 17, 1300 E. Engineer- ing Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, E. O. Gilbert. Doctoral Examination for Samuel Dix- on Miller, Music; thesis: "W.tOtto Miess- ner and His Contributions to Music in American Schools," Thurs., May 17, 106 Lane Hall (Dr. Britton's Office), at 4:15 p.m. Chairman, A. P. Britton. Doctoral Examination for Ernest Har- burg, Social Psychology; thesis: "Covert Hostility: It's Social Origins and Rela- tionship with Overt Compliance" on Thurs., May 17 at 9 a.m. in 5609 Haven Hall. Chairman, T. M. Newcomb. Doctoral Examination for George Rog- er Sell, Mathematics; thesis: "Stability Theory and Lyapunov's Second Meth- od," Thurs., May 17, 305 W. Engin. Bldg., at 2:00 p m.Co-Chairmen, Wilfred Kap- lan and Lamberto Cesari. Events Friday Composers symposium: The Midwest- ern Student Composers Symposium will present public concerts on Fri., May 18, and Sat., May 19, in Hill Aud. and Aud. A, Angell Hall. All programs of the School of Music are open to the gen- eral public without charge. On Fri., May 18, The University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra, Josef Blatt, conducting, with David Suther- land, assisting, will present the first concert at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Aud. Works composed by members of each of the participating schools will be performed. On Sat., May 19, four chamber music programs will be presented. At 10:00 a.m. the University of Iowa will present its student composers in Aud. A; at 1:00 p.m. the University of Illinois in Aud. A; at 3:00 p.m. the University of Mich- igan in Hill Aud.; at 8:30 p.m. North- western University in Aud. A. Applied Mathematics Seminar: Prof. J. E. Littlewood, Cambridge, England, will speak on "Celestial Mechanics on Non-Linear differential Equations over a Very Long Time" and "A New Dis- covery in the van der Pol Equations with Large K" Fri., May 18, at 4:00 p.m. in 229 West Engineering. Refreshments in 274 West Engineering at 3:30 p.m. Psychology Colloquium: Dr. George Mandler, University of Toronto, will speak on "Structure and Response Fac- tors in Verbal Learning" on Fri., May 18 at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. B. Coffee in 3417 Mason Hall at 3:45 p.m. Astronomy Department Visitors' Night: Fri., May 18, 8:30 p.m., 2003 Angell Hall. Dr. William E. Howard will speak on "Galactic and Globular Clusters." After the lecture the Student Observa- tory, fifth floor of Angell Hall, will be open for inspection and for tele- scopic observations of the Moori, dou- ble star and cluster. Children welcomed, but must be accompanied by adults. Doctoral Examination for John Rob- ert Tillman, Geology; thesis: "Variation NEBRETH HILLEL ANNOUNCES that Starting Monday, May 21 It's study room will be available every night 'til .12 p.m. 1 " I I i " * N * U * I * I * I - _FAMOUS FORPIZZA- 1 I t I w SAVE 35c witn THIS COUPON oLarge and Medium " 1 I FREEPIZZA M " F REE 512 E. FAST WI L L I AMS DELIVERY NO 3-5902 " . 1 . . mm mm1 mmm mm ml mm mm m3mm mm ml mm ..... .... .... .... ...R ..*..V.;; ............:4.... .4. . . . . 4 L......... :":. :.: : i-i "'::". ,a .ft, ":~ ~^".J,.':..1JYVYY1.4VJ".1Ya4tYl4'...Ja''a.MA.:~~..J'"}'lK:67. "a~ 4h4:ii':":} :rJ~:A::.!L .:::ixNv :":"".}::" 't DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN . . ..... .:,.".. .....:4::. ....... L,.:...,:a... "J...,."y1. ......:...J.a :::V:......a..:Y .^.."., tY . . *.". ^::: ".*..*.* .* . . .r .. . . . . . n...*. "' .L.. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. ..1.:J...1. "i:Vi:':"?if ELECT JIM HAVEL for ISA Vice-President in Species of Mucrospirifer from Middle Devonian Rocks of Michigan, Ontario and Ohio" Fri., May 18, 2045hNatural Science Bldg., at 2:30 p.m. Chairman, E. C. Stumm. Doctoral Examination for David Phil- lip Kessler, Chemical Engineering; thesis: "Multiple Emulsion Formation as a Hydrodynamic Phenomenon Using Cylindrical Jets," Fri., May 19, 3201 E. Engin. Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, J. L. York. Doctoral Examination for Olga Ber- nice Bishop, Library Science; thesis: "Publications of the Government of the Province of Canada, 1841-1867," Fri., May 18, E.:Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, R. H. Gjelsness. Doctoral Examination for Charles William Heffernan, Music; thesis: "Thomas Whitney Surette: Musician and Teacher," Fri., May 18, 106 School of Music, at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, A. P. Britton. Doctoral Examination for Martin Gol- nsky, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "An Analytical Determination of the Existence of Optimum Points in a Class of Networks," Fri., May 18, 1203 E. Engin. Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, L. F. Kazda. Placement Beginning the week of Mon., May 21, 1962 the following schools will be at the Bureau to interview candidates for the 1962-1963 schoolvyear. TUES., MAY 22- Lake Orion, Mich.-Fields not yet an- nounced. Oxford, Mich. (Elementary School)- Kdg.; Elem. Engl. (Grades 5-9). WED., MAY 23- Clawson, Mich.-Elem. (4, 5, 6, & 4/5), Visit. Teach., Jr. HS Gen. Sc., Math, SS; HS Art, Girl's PE, 10th grade Engi., Shop (Mech. Draw. Major). THURS., MAY 24- Livonia, Mich.-Elem.; Emot. Dist., Jr. HS Ment. Retard., Math/Sci., Visit. Teach., Span.; HS Read., Elem. Vocal, Span. FRI., MAY 25- Grosse Ile, Mich-Elem.; Jr. HS & HS Span./Fre., Math, Speech/Engl., Part time Guid. or Vocal or SS with above. Jr. HS & HS Coach in any sport. Marlette, Mich.-1st grade; Sp. Corr.; Girl's PE; Jr. HS & HS Comm/Math or Gen. Math or Engl., Engl./Speech, Com- merce/Gen. Math with Algebra. * * * For additional information and ap- pointments contact the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB, 663-1511, Ext. 3547. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad students, please call Ext. 3544 for interview ap- pointments with the following: MON., MAY 21- Harvard Univ. Grad. School of Bus. Ad., Boston, Mass.-WOMEN to fill cur- rent openings for Assistantships in the first-yr. course entitled "Written Analy- sis of Cases." Will relieve load on pro- fessors by criticizing the prose & pick- ing holes in logic of papers analyzing actual business problems presented as case studies. No specific major'required, but must have B & preferably B plus average. TUES., MAY 22- John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., Boston, Mass. (p.m. only) - Men with college bkgd. in any field for In- surance Sales. Exper. not necessary. Will train. Current openings in Metro- politan Detroit & S.E. Mich. SUMMER PLACEMENT: 212 SAB- Playbill Summer 1962-Looking for ticket salesmen & saleswomen. This Is a U. of M. theater group. Danny's Restaurant & Cocktail Lounge, St. Ignace, Mich. - Several waitressing positions open. Laclede Gas Co., St. Louis, Mo.-Open- ings for engrg. students with at least Junior standing, B average, & U.S. citizenship. The Grace Hospital, Detroit, Mich.- Openings for medical students - in its operating rooms. Executive Girls, Toledo, 0.-Tempor- ary office positions for qualified girls. Gasoilair Equipment Co., New Haven, Conner-Openings for student workers, male, to work in their home towns this summer as part of an Introductory Marketing Prog. & Study. Klamath Falls Camp Fire Girls, Inc., Oregon-Openings for Unit Frog. Coun- selors, Unit Frog. Counselor for CIT & high sch. girls, Counselors, Waterfront, Dining Room Counselor, Nurse-Female only. Come to Summer Placement for fur- ther information. It will be open from 8:30 a.nm. to 12 noon & 1:30 p.m. to 4:55 p.m. from nowuntil the end of the exam period. POSITION OPENINGS:- Fourteenth NavalGDistrict, San Fran- cisco, Calif--Architect for District Pub- lic Works Office in Pearl Harbor. BA in Architecture. File by June 2. Pennsaitt Chemicals,Wyandotte, Mich. -(1) Chemical Engnr. BS Chem. Engrg. plus 0-3 yrs. exper. in production engrg. (2) Administrative Ass't. to Manager, Tech. Dept. BS Chem. Engrg. or Chem- istry plus MBA. Exper. not essential. Will consider June grads. W. R. Grace & Co., Clarksville, Md.- Current openings are: Inorganic or Physical-Inorganic Chemists (PhD); Analytical Chemists (Indust. exper.); Physicist or Physical Chem. (exper.); PlasticstDevelopment Engnr. (BS); In- formation Center Head (PhD Chem. plus exper.);. Reference Librarian (BS or MS Chem. with interest in Chem. litera- ture). Mich. Training School, Ionia, Mich.- (1) Landscape Architect. BA. No exper. required. (2) Maintenance Supt. Prefer Engrg. bkgd. Exper. preferred, but not required. Vitramon, Inc., Bridgeport, Conn. - Need personnel in areas of Chem. & Physics wh can apply their basic knowl- edge to industrial problems. Work will be in materials research (solid state components). Please call General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. .3544 for further 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-Ann Arbor resident to sell insur- ance. i-time during school, full- time during summer vacation and vacations during the year. 1-To do yardwork through the sum- mer. Must have your own equip- ment. All day Saturday. 3-Engineering students to do apart- ment maintenance in exchange for rooms with private bath. (Quiet- studious boys). No cooking, drinking or parties. Must be available for two or three years, summer and winter. -Meal job openings. why cart all those clothes home? * Call Greene's Cleaners today! We'll deliver your storage box- Fill it with your winter garments- We'll pick it up-clean your garments- Store them in our air conditioned vault. Next fall-give us a call. We'll deliver- fresh and clean--beautifully pressed. * It's so convenient-and cheaper than shipping. Still only $4.95 plus regular cleaning charge. Call and reserve your box today. Greene's Cleaners NO 2-3231 4 I Delicious Hamburgers.., ,15c Hot Tasty French Fries. ,,1c Triple Thick Shakes...20c 2000 W..Stadium Blvd*. o t- r I I' 1 4 Notes Economic Values Of Voluntary Sterilization __- A Before you choose come IXI and see the... = A program of voluntary sterili- zation in over-populated nations would pay for itself 100 times over, Prof. Stephen Enke of Duke Uni- versity said Monday at a Univer- sity conference on health econ- omics. Enke, who has worked with the government of India, said that population growth slows economic growth, and each $3 sterilization operation in a country like India could save the nation $300. "It surprises me how many men in the United States have told me they have had this operation, par- ticularly professional men with Jakobson To Give Language Speech Prof. Roman Jakobson of Har- vard University will speak on "The Search for Language Universals" at 4:10 p.m. today in Aud. A. The lecture is under the sponsorship of the Department of Slavic Studies, the Slavic Language and Area Center and the Communications Sciences Laboratory. two or three children in large met- ropolitan areas," he reported. Dr. Rashi Fein of the President's Council of Economic Advisors told the conference, "Better health is part of a higher standard of living. "But it may also increase the supply of productive labor and other economic resources, partic- ularly land-use.' The improvement of health is only one step in improving the whole economy. It makes the un- productive, sick individual more economically productive and able to join the labor force, he ex- plained. Hectorians Tap Twelve Juniors Hectorians, the fraternity presi- dents' honorary, tapped twelve new members last night. Tapped were: William Harris, '63E, John Meyerholz, '63BAd, David Croys- dale, '63, Fred Reicher, '63, Max Apple, '63, Bill Burchfield, '63, Max Wexter, '63, Star Tranpel, '63, Dave Rendall, '63, Wayne Smith, '63E, John McConnell, '63E, and Rod Johnson, '63. SUMMER JOBS FOR MALE STUDENTS Applications now being accepted for summer jobs with major national corporation. Young men 18 years of age or over wanted to work in marketing, sales promotion and brand identification positions during summer. Will work with high level executive management. d SCHOLARSHIPS: SALARY: SEE BRITAIN: 16-$1,000 Scholarships 16-$500 Scholarships Con earn in excess of $150 per week Guaranteed $98 per week Win an all-expense paid holiday in England for entire week. You'll love choosing from our unusually r large Artcarved selection. For here is the widest range from traditional orna- ment to advanced modern styling-all in excellent taste, beautiful down to the smallest detail, crafted in especially hardened gold. Your Artcarved wedding ring is waiting for you! Come in soonl A. TENDERNESS RING Groom's Ring $35.00 Bride's Ring $32.50 5. ATHENA RING Groom's Ring $29.50 Bride's Ring $27.50 C. GALLANTRY RING Groom's Ring $32.50 Bride's Ring $29.50 D. PRUDENCE RING Groom's Ring $45.00 Bride's Ring $39.50 E. LARGO RING Groom's Ring $27.50 Bride's Ring $27.50 F. SANCTITY RING Groom's Ring $32.50 Bride's Ring $29.50 Those students who qualify may continue their association next semester on a part time basis. For interview call College Director DETROIT-WO 5-0561 GRAND RAPIDS-GL 6-7451 LANSING- IV 2-5806 SOUTH BEND -CE 2-1353 A 4 F*M .,I.F&. T- .Rings"Wood toShow 4040L I - As seen in .. ""U 'I 11 fl I '' , 1