100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

May 25, 1962 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-05-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE EIGHT

THE MICHIGAN UAIII ,V

r*o rT * v aair w rer a r

1 I

FRiIDAY, MAY 25, 1

METEOROLOGY:
'U' Team To Participate
In Indian Ocean Survey

Cardboard Virus

Beginning this summer, Univer-j
sity meteorologists will take part'
in a massive, international study
of the interactions between the
ocean and the atmosphere.
The University team, with Prof.
Donald J. Portman of the engi-
neering college directing, will par-
ticipate in the International In-
dian Ocean Expedition under a
three-year, $230,000 National Sci-
ence Foundation research grant.
Exchange of Energy
The two major concerns of the
United States team are the ex-

change of energy between the
ocean and the atmosphere, and
atmospheric circulation, Prof.
Portman said.
Since the energy exchange .be-
tween the ocean and the atmos-
phere varies markedly with the
seasons, investigators hope to gain
a better understanding of how the
exchange takes place. This knowl-
edge will result in a better under-
standing of the dynamics of the
atmosphere.
Transfer of Heat
One of the phenomena which
will be under intensive study is the
transfer of heat through the at-
mosphere from the equator to the
poles.
"It is this unequal heating that
runs the atmosphere. Until we
have the iiformation we expect to
get from this effort, we won't be
able to understand fully the cir-
culation of the oceans and the
atmosphere, Prof. Portman ex-
plained.
"If we don't understand this, we
cannot predict meteorological sit-
uations satisfactorily."

DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
(Continued from Page 4)
for tonight, 8:30 p.m.uthe recital is
rescheduled for Sat., June 30,
The following student sponsored so-
cial events are approved for the com-
ing weexend Social chairmen are re-
minded that requests for approval tor
social events are due in the Office of
Student Affairs not later than 12
o'clock noon on the Tuesday prior to
the event.
MAY 25-
Theta Chi, Pledge party.
MAY 26-
Anderson House, Open open; Couzens
Hall, Dance; Mich. Christian Fellowship,
Spring banquet; Sigma Nu, Party.
Events Saturday
University Horn Ensemble: The Uni-
versity Horn Ensemble will be assisting
the Fourth Annual High School Horn
Clinic Concert on Sat., May 26, 7:30
p.m. in Hill Aud. with Louis Stout, con-
ductor. Compositions to be performed
are by Lorenz, Palestrina, Handel,
Beethoven, Hindemith, Ostransky, Men-
delssohn, Garcia, and Wagner. Open
to the general public.
Doctoral Examination for D. M.
Grimes, Electrical Engineering; thesis:
"The Low-Temperature Order-Disorder
Transition in Natural Magnetite and
Synthetic Magnetite with Varying De-
grees of Doping," Sat., May 26, 2075
E. Engin. Bldg., at 9:30 aam. Chairman,
D. M. Grimes.
Doctoral Examination for Jan Cor-
nelis\Tan, English Language & Litera-
ture; thesis: "English Language Teach-
er Training in Indonesia," Sat., May 26,
2601 Haven Hall, at 10:00 a.m. Chairman,
W. J. Gedney.
Doctoral Examination for Chi-hua Wu
Hsiung, Chemical Engineering; thesis:
"A Mathematical Study of Gas-Phase
Hot-Atom Reactions," Sat., May 26, 1300
E. Engin. Bldg., at 9:00 a.m. Co-Chair-
men, A. A. Gordus and J. J. Martin.
Doctoral Examination for Joel Henry
Ferziger, Nuclear Engineering; thesis:
"The Theory of Neutron Slowing Down
in Nuclear Reactors," Sat., May 26, 315
Auto. Lab,, North Campus, at 9:00 a.m.
Chairman, P. F. Zweifel.
Placement
Attn.: Registrants-All students reg-
istered with the Bureau of Appoint-
ments, both General & Educational

Divisions, are requested to notify the
Bureau when you have accepted a po-
sition in order that your records may
be kept up to date. If you are still
available, let us know where you can be
reached after Commencement, since
new positions come in all summer & we
may need to contact you.
SUMMER PLACEMENT:
212 SAB-
Good Humor Man-Positions for driv-
ers in New York, New Jersey, Conn.,
Pa.. Md., Wash., D.C., Ohio, Ill., Mich.
and Florida. Great opportunities, good
pay.
POSITION OPENINGS:
B. F. Goodrich Co., Akron, 0.--Open-
ings as follows-Technical: Product En-
gnrs. ;Product Engnr.-Indust. Products;
Materials Engnr.-Indust. Products; Non-
Technical: Sr. Systems Development
Analyst (BS or BA with 5 yrs. exper.);
Computer Consultant (BS/MS with
work on PhD. Major field Physics, Engrg.
or related field),
Northern Natural Gas Co., Omaha,
Neb.-Openings are: (1) Scientific An-
alyst-either BS or MS in Math. Minor
in Physics helpful. (2) Mathematician-
MS Math with 2-3 yrs. related computer
exper. (3) Systems Engineer-Degree
Mech. or Chem. Engrg. 2-3 yrs. related
computer exper.
Southern Illinois Univ., Edwardsville,
Ill.-Immediate openings: (1) Mech.
Engnr.-8-10 yrs. exper., ME necessary.
(21 Construction Supervisor-8-10 yrs.
exper., Civil or Arch. Engnr. (3) Land-
scape Architect--Degree plus 4-5 yrs.
exper. (4) Licensed Architect-Degree
plus 3-5 yrs. exper. (5) Electrical Engnr.
-Degree plus 5 yrs. exper.
Carolina Country Club, Raleigh, N.C.
Manager for entire responsibility of
running the club. Buying, preparation
of food, club admin. Male with any
college bkgd. No exper. required. Must
be mature.
Instrument Co., La Grange, Ill. Elec-
tronic Technician for servicing high-
priced electronic samplings-machines
in Ann Arbor area. Could develop into
sales position if person is qualified.
Male with science or engrg. bkgd.-
degree not essential.
Lenawee Youth Center, Adrian, Mich.
-Social Worker-Male. BA in Social
Sciences or Guidance & Counseling.
Pertinent exper. Will train. Will do
case work with family with young
teen age boys and girls.
City of Jackson, Mich--Public Health
Nurse for staff of health dept. Degree
in Public Health Nursing preferred.
Stahl Finish Co., Peabody, Mass.-Co.
is distributor of leather finishes. Want
to extend mfg, operations to Japan.
Need young man of Japanese ancestry
or someone most fluent with Japanese
language. BS in Chem. or Chem. Engrg.
(perhaps Lib'1 Arts with emphasis on
Chem). Must have interest in returning

to Japan. Will be Manager of Japanese
mfg. operations.
For further information, please call
General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200
SAB, Ext. 3544.
Part-Time
Em ployment
The following part-time jobs are
avaiiarle. Appllcatiuns for these lobs
can be made in the f'art-tLime k'lae-
ment Office, 2200 Student Activities
Building, during the folowing hours:
Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. til 12 noon
and 1:30 ti1 5 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring students
for part-time or full-time temsporary
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-An Arbor resident to sell insur-
ance. % -time during school, full-
time during summer vacation and
vacations during the year.
1-To do yardwork through the sum-

wuer Must have your own equip-
went, All day Saturday.
3-Enauneering 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
tw , or three years, summer and
winter.
-Several boys for yard jobs.
1-Meat clerk. Must have experience
with meats. 4 or 5 days per week,
from 4 or 5 p.m. until 9 p.m.
6-Tostake inventory. Min. of half
days. $1.35 per hour.
-Several Students to sell summer
and/or fall-winter-spring University
Players season tickets on a commis-
sion basis. One week duration *of
Job.
FEMALE
1-To clean apartments. The hours will
be flexible
2-Experienced typists. Half-time or
full-time temporary for two weeks
to one month.
-Several Students to sell summer
and/or fall-winter-spring University
Players season tickets on a commis-
sion basis. One week duration of
job.

' , /

SPONGE VIRUSES-Theodore F. Beals, a University public
health researcher, holds sponge models of viruses which he con-
structed for classroom use. The models - of a polio virus (left)
and a tobacco mosaic virus - are made of cardboard and red,
blue and green wedges of sponge plastic. Sponges represent tiny
bits of protein which coat viruses,

LEGAL DECISIONS:
Zeisel Analyzes Sociology of Lawt

By JOAN SIMPSON v
The layman's notion of law is
essentially wrong, Prof. Hans Zei-
sel, of the University of Chicago
law and sociology departments,
said Wednesday.
In a lecture on "Sociology and
Law," he explained that most lay-
men consider law to be a set of
rules which judges apply to come
out with a verdict. "However, prec-
edents don't really decide a case,"
Prof. Zeisel said.
"What really decides a case are
considerations of what is a sense
of justice and what will be the,

immediate effects of the decision
on the litigants and the long-range
effects on the community." Such
questions are actually social sci-
ence questions, he noted.
Essence of Social Science
"The essence of social science is
the development of a tool chest
which enables it to perform cer-
tain things that law can't do.
The problem of research in law
is that law itself must necessarily
limit experimentation, Prof. Zei-
sel explained. For instance, it is
not legally possible to try a person
twice, and so scientists cannot

i"='

'

'
.c :
" .t,
s

LEVI'S are the jeans that fit right-
feel right-look right-in class and
out. And they're pre-shrunk to stay
that way, Washing after washing.
Buy your exact size.
ALL WAIST SIZES
$429
SAM'S STORE
122 E. Washington

If you're
ai Sum~mer Bride,
< nzow is/the time
\{\to order
Wedding(
invitations
at
IRAMSA Y PRINTCEIRS
[9 E. Liberty NO 8-7900

compare the effect of different
methods.
Prof. Zeisel then discussed ex-
periments dealing with insanity of
defendants, "claim:-conscious" ci-
ties and a study of the agreement
between verdicts by judges and
those by juries.
New Method
In the experiment on insanity,
he found that a new method of,
determining insanity, i.e. "if the
criminal act was a product of a
mental defect or disease," allows
the "jury to exert its own judg-
ment" more than under the tra-
ditional way of asking whether. the
defendant knew what he was doing
and knew its morality.
"Lawyers suspect that certain
cities are claim conscious. People
in those cities are more apt to
take their claims into court," he
noted.
Prof. Zeisel said that such cities
have more "second thought"
cases, those in which an injury is
reported some time after the ini-
tial claim was made.
Sense of Justice
In a study of agreement be-
tween judges and juries on ver-
dicts, it was found that there is
"no differential sense of justice if
the case is clear," Prof. Zeisel ex-
plained.
He added that, "The job of so-
cial science in such a field as law
is to be ingenious and prudent.
The sociology of law is no more
than taking problems relevant to
law and answering them with more
data than the law can have access
to."

ENJOY DINNER AT

AT-TI
Restaurant, coffee shopc
cocktail lounge Now Op
The new Holiday Inn is
located on the north side of
Jackson Avenue, just west of
1-94 (Detroit Expressway)
on the western rim
of Ann Arbor.7

HE-INN
and
en
THE PATioNs
INNKEEPER"
ol f, w r-r. \

A Warm Welcome awaits you
at the
GRAN.-D
of the new
r
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, May 27, 1962
See the finest new motor inn in the midwest

I

Announce Winners /" W :
Of Pledge Awards
Phi Mu and Alpha Omicron Pi
won the Help Week award for the
pledge classes with the highest per o
cent turnout at the Fresh Air **
Camp Wednesday night. Both
groups had complete pledge class
attendance.

11

Your Host from Coast to Coaste

d

II

I'
I

m

Planning a party? We accommodate
groups of ten to thirty - with food and appointments
to the most exacting taste. There's a wide choice of
menus, efficient service, and personal assistance on all
details. May we give you complete
information?
Vite Corner JIoue
S. Thayer at Washington in Ann Arbor
A block west of Rackham Bldg.-NO 8-6056
Enjoy the Finest40
CANTONESE
FOOD
ii I4

TAKE

TIME
DINEI

OU -T

DEL RIO BAR*
Freshly Remodeled - New Management
Beer, Wine, Liquor and Cocktails

. .
L ~
G rr
I

Specializing in Delicious Pizza Pie

Sandwich~es

TO

BUT

U --"

Phone NO 2-9575

122 W. Washington

I

A i'
ti
.
A' r< i
,'f '
t r aL'sY). "" a
~ ..
T ", j i.,t.
. *' _
.i
M i - + ..
r
- -::.:.. -r^v'Y'x5:r.:.:.Q ,N" ,.,+,a,, "...'. : :ra y ,r,;^:x; ;: ;:;.s:"::..x,. ,.,";.;5 3:; ; °>',:yi
.:. ..:. .. ..k:.: ;.: :.::
::i1i?+==iii% '"isLi'ti>i+?2 i:i::i:i =;% ii:::;.. °..dcx.
t.'svS:aSS:: . Li& vs a,2d3:J'i2}:.:f: a:: {r a'tiY.at',".'": sf{+i;;;:l::i:.

THOMPSON'S RESTAURANT
offers you a taste treat
of a traditional Italian dish

I

I

'y - 4
'o+sh ' AI
X0I

1'ti ..
rs
..:
G ii: ?::
{r.g
:
§:-! S
t.:; :'
E'^'.;
.....r

FRESH
WHOLE
LOBSTER
Drawn butter, 1 fa lb.

f}4:::
?ih

PIZ

FINE
SEAFOOD

will be served doily from
12 Noon to 2 P.M. and 5 P.M. to 2 A.M.

I

I

I~

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan