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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.

October 12, 1961 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1961-10-12

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

The Members of the
International Student's Association
will hold their first Regional Discussion
"Glinuse ocf Af rica"
Friday, October 13,

SOCIAL WORK:
Foundation Gives Grant,

I I

The School of Social Work re-
cently received a grant of $261,710
from the Russell Sage Foundation
for doctoral programs, Dean Fe-
dele F. Fauri announced.
The grant is to be given over
a five-year period, Fauri said, and
was the second made to the school
by the foundation in a period of
five years.
This grant, and the previous:
ones, have enabled the school to
add more faculty members, pro-
vide small grants for faculty re-

search and establish fellowships
for doctoral students.
Fauri added that the Social
work school's doctoral program is
based essentially on these Sage
grants. "They have made it pos-
sible for the University to
strengthen its educational offer-
ings to enable students to equip
themselves to take leadership roles
in social welfare."
FaurL explained that the object
of the program is to train a greater
number of people

ForDirect Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786
from 1:0 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 9:30 'tii 11:30 A.M.
___ ___ ___CLASS IFI ED ADVERTISiNG
C ASFE AD E TSN-THE WEE SHOP is here!If you're look-
ing for something different and new SPECIAL
in gifts or flowers, come see us, 619 SIX-DAY
Packard F4 LINES ONE-DAY RATE
THE CHI O's are having an auction for 1955 DOdE ROYAL, excell
the sigma Nu's doghouse. Come buy. good tires, new motor. NO
F3 - 8 er 4:34.
HEY LEGS, you can drop over anytime. 37FOR SALE: Mercedes Benz, 1
HE. EGy0nd ryVm$2700. Ca,1 Don Robbins,
^3A

INTERNATIONAL MUSIC and
DANCING will follow

7:00 International Center

ii

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

BEST QUAL ITY
FULL CUT
RAGLAN SLEEVE
SWEAT SHI1RTS
DESIGNS
and COLORS

ULRICHS
Ann Arbor's Friendly Bookstore

i

OPEN TILL 9 P.M. EVERY NIGHT
SATURDAV TILL 6 P.M.
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
ALL'.ANGEL
ALL FOLK MUSICF
H1=F1 and STEREO
On Angel-Choose from the finest in OPERAS, RECITALS
Chamber Music, Orchestras, Conductors.
For Folk Music, choose from such labels as FOLKWAYS,
RIVERSIDE, VANGUARD, ELKTRA, COLUMBIA, RCA
VICTOR, CAPITOL, TRADITION, ATLANTA, FIESTA,
EPIC,-You name it, if there is'folk music on the record,
it is onsale.

(Continued from Page 4)
Language Exam for Masters Degree in
History, Oct. 13, 4-5 p.m., 429 Mason
Hall. Dictionaries may be used. Sign
the list posted in the History Office,
3601 Haven Hall,
Student Government Council an-
nounces approval for the following stu-
dent sponsored activity. Approval be-
comes effective twenty-four (24) hours
after the publiation of this notice.
All publicity fo' these events must be
withheld until the approval has be-
come effective.
Oct. 21-Homecoming 1961, Dog Races,
Diagonal, 11:30 a.m.
Oct. 20-Homecoming and Wolverine
Club, Pep Rally, erry Field, 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 20-Homecoming and Wolverine
Club, Yell Like Hell, Ferry Field, 8:30
p.m.
Oct. 21-Homecoming, Tug of War,
Island Park, 10130 a.m.
Oct. 21-Homecoming Mud Bowl
Football Game, Mud Bowl, Sigma Alpha
Epsilon, South University at Washte-
naw, 9:00 a.m.
Oct. 21 - Homecoming, Phi Psi Le
Mans Go cart Race and Open House,
Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity, 4:30 p.m.
Oct. 21-Homecoming, Alumni Picnic,
Ferry Field, 11 am. to 1:30 p.m.
Oct. 28-Chinese Student Club, Chin-
ese Dinner, First Methodist Church, 6
p.m.
Oct. 1--Challenge, Seminar, E & R
Disciples Guild House, 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 13-SGC-Wolverine Club, Michi-
gan-Michigan State Pep Rally, Diag, 7-
9 p.m.
Oct. 16,,17-Alpha Phi Omega, Career
Book Distribution, Angell Hall, Mason
Hall, West, Engineering Building.
Oct. 19-Challenge, Seminar, E & R
Disciples Guild House, 7:30 p.m.
Events Thursday
Public Lecture: "Upp r Civil Servants
in Japanese Bureaucracy," by Bernard
Silberman, Asst. Prof. of History, Uni-
versity of Arizona. Thurs., Oct. 12, at
4:10 p.m., West Conference Room, Rack-
ham Bldg.
Events Friday
Biological Chemistry Lecture: Dr. W.
Db Stein will discuss "Evidence for a
w Mechanism of Membrane Transfer:
e Dimerizer" on Fri., Oct. 13 at 4
p.m. in M6423 Medical Science Bldg.
Coffee in M5410 at 3:30 p.m.
Astronomical Colloquium: Fri., Oct.
13, 4:15 p.m., The Observatory. Dr. Don-
ald Muggiestone will speak on "Satura-
tion Effects in Stellar Abundance De-
terminations."
Doctoral Examination for Charles Al-
len Stevens, Nuclear Engineering; thes-
is: "The Harmonics Method for Nu-
clear Reactor Analysis," Fri., Oct. 13,
315 Auto. Li.b., at 10:00 a.m. Chairman,
P. F. Zweifel
Doctoral Examination for Lloyd War-
ren Wedberg, Germanic Languages &
Literatures; thesis: "The Theme of
Loneliness in Theodor Storm's Novel-
len," Fri., Oct. 13, 1080 Frieze Bldg., at
3:00 p.m. Chairman, F. X. Braun.
Placement
POSITION OPENINGS:
U.S. Army Engnr. Div., South Atlan-
tic-Alumni-for position as Econom-
ist. Responsible for conduct of econom-
ic studies for predicting future econo-
my as it concerns future needs for
water resource projects & related land
uses.
Presbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital, Chi-
cago, I1l.-Openings for Chemists, Bio-
chemist (PhD), Medical Lab. Tech.,
Med. Tech. Trainees, Registered Nurses,
and Radiology Trainees. Hospital is af-
filiated with Univ. of Illinois.
San Bernardino County Civil Service,
Calif.-Personnel Aide opening for grad
with major in industrial relations or
"-,,Yh. Probable promotion to Person-
nel Technician at later time. Apply for
written test.
U.S. Civil Service, 7th District-In-
formation & Editorial positions with
options in: Publications, General, Vis-
ual, Radio (& TV), and Press. Apply by
Jan. 10, 1962.t
Hospital, Local' Vicinity-Ass't Supt.
of Bldg. Services. Person with Public
Health background, plus supervisory
exper. for staff position involving re-
search & evaluation of procedures for1
infection control. Requires potential forI
advancement to managerial level..
training employes, etc.
Eastman Kodak Company - Various
openings as follows: Engineers (CE, EE,.
IE, .& ME), Chemists, Physicists, Ac-'
countants, Business Administrators,
Mathematicians, Economists, Statisti-
cians, Librarians, and Lawyers. Loca-
tions: Rochester, N.Y.; Kingsport,
Tenn.; & Longview, Texas.
Please contact General Div., Bureau 1
of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for fur-1
ther information.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Bureau
of Appointments-Seniors & grad. stu-
dents, please call Ext. 3544 for inter-..
view appointments with the following:
WED., OC.T. 18-
Shell Development Company, Div. of6
Shell Oil Co., Houston, Texas - PhDC

Candidates in Physics for Research &
Development. Location of Work: Hous-
ton, Texas; Wood River, Ill.; Martinex,
Calif,; Denver, Colo.; Torrance, Calif.;
and Emeryville, Calif.
Bureau of the Census, Washington,
D.C.-Men & WOMEN-U.S. Citizens-
with degrees in Liberal Arts for pro-
grams in Research & Development,
Survey Mgmt., Foreign Trade, & Eco-
nomics. Men, any degree level, in Math.
or Statistics for Demographic Stat. &
other stat. programs. i
U.S. Department of State, Washing-
ton, D.C.-Students interested in tak-
ing Foreign Service Officer Exam. Ap-
plications must be in Wash., D.C. by
Oct. 23, 1961. Exam given in Detroit,
Mich. on Dec.9. In addition ,to group
interviews held four different hours
during the day, a meeting will be held
at 4:00 'p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall for
all interested students.
THURS., OCT. 19-
} Service Bureau Corporation, Detroit,
Mich.-Location of work: Branch Of-
fices in Great Lakes area. Men with
degrees in any field of Liberal Arts
for Sales. Service Bureau Corp., a sub-
sidiary of IBM, handles data processing
services on a contracted basis.
FRI., OCT. 20-
Argonne National Laboratory (p.m.),
Argonne, 1.-Location of work: Ar-
gonne, Ill. Men & WOMEN with PhD
in Physical Chemistry or with MS or
PhD in Math for Research & Develop-
ment. Opportunity to work with top'
scientists in Atomic Energy field.
Part-Time
Employment
rhe following part-time jobs are
available. Applications for these jobs
can be made in the Part-time Place-
ment Office, 2200 SAB, Monday thru
Friday 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 1:30 til
5 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring stu-
dents for part-time or full-time tem-
porary work, should contact Jack Lar-
die, NO 3-1511, ext. 3553.
Students desiring miscellaneous odd
lobs should consult the bulletin board
in Room 2200, daily.
MALE
2-Room jobs, 1 for this semester only,
1 for the school year.
1-Commercial artist, 2-4 hours per'
mo.
2-Production help, making donuts.
Hours 9-12 noon or 4-8 p.m., 5-7
days per week.
1-Busboy, 12:00-2:00, five days per
week.,
1-Pianist, Thurs., Friday and Satur-
day evenings.
4-Salesmen, sell china & silverware,
commission basis.
3-Salesmen to sell college sportswear
for men.
2-Psych, experiments.
-Several salesmen to sell magazines.
1-Engineering student, must be at
least a junior, background in ra-
dio-isotope.
2-3-Ambulance drivers & attendants,
experienced in first aid, Senior card
in Red Cross. Night hours avail-
able, 7 nights per week.
4-5-Laborers, mornings or. afternoons
for 3 weeks, possibly longer.
1-Janitorial work, 6-7 hours per week,
for at least a year.
FEMALE
4-Full-time waitresses, hours flexible.
1-Pianist, Thurs., Friday & Saturday
evenings.
2-Waitresses, 12-2:00 p.m., Monday
thru Friday.
1-Commercial artist, 2-4 hours per
month.
2-Psych, experiments.
3-Counter work, washing shelves, etc.,
mornings or afternoons, thru the
school year.
1-Full-time saleslady for women's
apparel, experienced.

PACHANGA PACHANGA PACHANGA
PACHANGA PACHANGA PACHANGA
PACHANGA PACHANGA PACHANGA
PACHANGA PACHANGA PACHANGA
NO 5-9625, Please. P63
WANTED-Talented female to teach Pa-
changa to four suave, lightfooted,
continental males. NO 5-9625. P62
BOB AND GREG, Please don't squeal.
Scotty. F64
Our closets are filled with brooms
For our men are in open rooms,
In the cellar below
Is our porter Joe,
Who was bid by your house I presume.
BOX SCORE US 70 U 69
and you're still on social pro. F65
ATTENTION: Will the tall blGnd with
the blue eyes make a point of win-
ning. K.S. F66
BB JUST HAD a break in book, can
squeeze you in on 21. Will triple in
Corvet. JS F67
STATE GAME, 4 tickets on 35 yard
line for sale. Call Bruce, NO 2-5571.
F68
DEAR JEAN, All arrangements have
been made. Will see you the weekend
of the 4th, as before. Love Me. F69
185 CHEERS for Spanish and football.
K.S. F1
PEGGY, I hear that you are a friend
of mine and that you, well,-you know
what comnes next. Benny. F2
"DAILY" WILL WITHOUT A DOUBT
DEMOLISH "UNION" IN THE HIGH-
LIGHT OF FOOTBALL ACTIVITY ...
F
STUDENTS, why the look of- dismay?
Yeah, I know, it's rather poor, when
you walk to 215 Ashley, to take in
some delicious food at the Schwaben
Inn and they're so full you can't get
in the door. F31
TUTOR in Math. 412 wanted. Contact
Ernie at 5-8597. P60
BEWARE of sloppy Scribblers, because
on Friday the 13th you-lose the waste-
basket where all your copy belongs.
Munion P61
ARE YOU the Truman Cole who USED
to date bleached blondes? If so, call
Miss Clairol at 3-1561-1063. P53
JOAN BAEZ is coming Oct. 27. Tickets
are now on sale at the Disc Shop. F56
ADVANCE RESERVATIONS for Joan
Baez can now be picked up from 2:30
to 5:30 at the Bud-Mor Agency, 1103
South University. F57
THE KINGSTON TRIO will be opening
at the Lansing Civic Center on Wed.,
Nov. 8-tickets $1.50, $2.50, $3.50. Make
your reservations at the Bud-Mor
Agency. 1103 S.University any after-
noon between 2-5:30 p.m. P27
RON BELL, Bill Curtin, The Royal
Lancers and Art Bartner are only a
few o fthe outstanding combos booked
by the Bud-Mor Agency. 1103 S. Uni-
Versity. NO 2-6362. 726
ATTENTION" ROTC
OFFICERS' SHOES
Army-Navy Oxfords - $7.95
Socks 39c. Shorts 69c
Military Supplies
SAM'S STORE
i22 E. WASHINGTON, W6

5.98 List

4.98 List
3.32

3.98 Listp

FREE PARKING

FREE PARKING

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ORGANIZATION
NOTICE S
Cercle Francais, Coffee Hour, 3-5
p.m., 3050 F; Meeting, Evening of fun
and entertainment, learn new songs in
French, 8 p.m., 3050 FB. Coffee & cook-
les, all welcome; Oct. 12.
* * *
Challenge, Discussion group - "Prob-
lems of Decision Making Process in
Democratic Societies," Oct. 12, 7:30
p.m., Guild House.
* * *
Christian Science Organization, Reg-
ular Testimony Meeting, Oct. 12, 7:30
p.m., 3545 SAB.
* * *
German Club, Coffee Hour, German
Conversation & Music, Oct. 12, 2-4 p.m.,
4072 FB. t
Intern'tl Students Assoc., Regional
Discussion "Glimpse of Africa," followed
by Music and Dancing, Oct. 13, 7 p.m.,
Intern'tl Center.
WAA Skating Club, Organizational
Meeting, Oct. 18, 7 p.m., Union.
Wesley Foundation, Graduate dinner
& program, Oct. 13, 5:30 p.m., Meth.
Church, Pine Rm.

ONCE AGAIN my bike has been stolen.
If ?you don't return it to the Union
before tonight I will turn your finger-
prints over to the FBI. It was the
red bike without a back fender. Bill.
A39
LOST-Pair of women's bifocal glasses.
Have dark brown rims with small sil-
ver V emblems in the corner. RE-
WARD, if found call Susie Wright at
NO 3-3381. A38
LOST-small beige leather purse Sat.
afternoon between the Stadium and
Saline Rd. area. REWARD. NO 8-8472.
A36
LOST-between Martha Cook and the
Law Club. Heavy silver Mexican
bracelet. REWARD. Call Pat Patraitis,
NO 2-3225. A
LOST-Black diary with lock, extremely
personal information inside in code.
I need this back or I will be liqui-
dated immediately. Boris at NO 9-
1673 after 12 p.m. A34
WHOEVER took a red wallet from a
purse in the Union PLEASE return
all ID papers. A9
Read the Classifieds

EATON PAPER CORPORATION i t:*PITTSFIELD, MASS.

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