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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 18, 1961 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1961-10-18

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wade To Deliver Lectures,
On Admimstrative Justice

Prof. H. W. R. Wade of Oxford
University will deliver the 1961
Thomas M. Cooley Lectures in law,
beginning at 4:15 p.m. today in
100 Hutchins Hall.'
The central theme of the five
lectures is "Towards Administra-
tive Justice" and will include the
specific topics of "The Mission
of the Law," on Oct. 18; "De-
pendence or Independence?" on
Oct. 19; "Hearings in Britain" on
Oct. 23; "Complaints and Con-
cessions" on Oct. 24; and "On the
Record or Off the Record" on Oct.,
25. -
Prof. Wade recently served on'
the three-man commission which
made a study of the relationship
between the Bugando kingdom and
the central government of Ugan-

da, Africa. Along with his articles
for legal periodicals, Prof. Wade
is the author of "The Law and
Real Property" and "Administra-
tive Law."
The Thomas M. Cooley Lecture
Series was named in honor of one
of the three members of the first
faculty at the University of Mich-
igan Law School.
Cooley was also a member of
the Supreme Court of Michigan
and later dean of the Law School.
The lectures, begun in 1947, were
made possible through the Wil-
liam W. Cook Endowment for Le-
gal Research..J
,-All five of Prof. Wade's lec-
tures will be held at 4:15 in room
100, Hutchins Hall,

Pro fess ions
May Merge
Disciplines
The medical and dental pro-
fessions will eventually merge in-
to one profession, Dr. William N.
Hubbard, Jr., dean of the Medical
School, told the Washtenaw Dis-
trict Dental Society, Monday.
In his talk, entitled "The Fu-
ture of Medical and Dental Rela-
tions," Dean Hubbard also laud-,
ed advances in two fields. He
claimed that clinical practice "has
changed more in the last genera-
tion than in the preceding 200
years."
The accumulation of scientific
knowledge and the high demand
for clinical service have caused
progress in the professions, he
said.

For Direct Classified Ad Service Phone NO 2-4786
from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday,and Saturday 9:30 'till 11:30 A.M.

-.990mm-

HI-FI, PHONO TV, and radio repair.
Clip this ad for free pickup and de-
livery. Campus Radio and TV, 325 E.
Hoover. NO 5-6644. J24
A-i New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington NO 2-1834
Why buy from out of
town - see this
GARRARD
"A" Changer
Shure M7D Cartridge
not $103.b0
B UTI79.50

I ,

- --Iqor-

SAVARINI SAVARIN! However you say
it, it's still the best coffee in the cup.
Instant or regular brewable type
available in limited quantities. 100
per customer limit.
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard NO 5-7131
Open 'til midnite every night.
J18
WONDERING what to do with your
spare time? Become a Goren fan with
Morrill's as your advisor. Finest bridge
assortment anywhere-playing cards,
score cards, andw'rule books. Con tact
Morrill's for your contract bridge. At
314 State Street. J28
SORORITIES, FRATERNITIES, The
Wee Shop, 619 Packard, will help you
yth flower arrangements for special
occasions. Special prices for houses,
delivery service! 335

rAGo'OG:Dit'4 tiss' '.1 '8 P .fi'' r ".' .{ { r . .. ' " " S *.
{v{ DA I LY f F
} U L L E T 1
}wt:. "' i"4'+aS&\ ^i3 1{: r, Y s y+,r,.}" ,r {.,y,, ,yp p ,prp a , . } .
. #:ift7+Y.'{:s'47S""J.SY"4' s+" ,tii ,ntr' d+SS' i l.-0:"'F tf+t' "'.'"'"..1':"
"s"5 $et . { C"T "76h e s .fi ::'7':kG":{i"S:tiN

RITZ BEAUTY SALON

(Continued from Page 4)
Events Thursday
Carillon Recital; Percival Price, Uni-
versity Carillonneur, will present a re-
cital on Thurs., Oct. 19 at 7:15 p.m. in
Burton Memorial Tower.
Laboratory Playbill: Thurs., Oct. 19,
at 4:10 p.m., in the Arena Theatre,
Frieze Bldg., A- double bill entitled "A
"Nativity" play .from the York Cycle,
Medieval Christmas" featuring the
and "Saint George and the Dragon."
Admission is free,
1961 Cooley Lectures: Dr. H. W. R.
Wade, Prof. of English Law, St. Johns
College, Oxford, England, will discuss'
"Dependence or Independence" on
Thurs., Oct. 19 at 4:15 in 100 Hutchins
Hall.
Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures:
"Rpme and the Latins under the Ro-
man Kings: The Annalist Fiction" will
be discussed by Andrew Alfoldi, Prof.-
of Roman History at Institute for Ad-
vanced Study,. Princeton, New Jersey,
on Thursday, Oct. 19, at 4:15 p.m. in
Aud. B.
American Chemical Society Lecture:'
Thurs., Oct. 19, 8:00 p.m., 1300 Chemis-;
try Bldg. Dr. Sidney W. Fox.of Florida
State University will, speak on "Ther-J
mal Copolymerization of Amino Acids."
Applied Mathematics Seminar: Prof.
Kenneth Case, Physics Department, will3
speak on "Stability of a Flow Against
a Plate," on Thurs., Oct. 19, at 4:00
p.m. in 246 West Engineering..,
Refreshments in 274 West Engine'ering4
at 3:30 p.m.
Seminar in Mathematical Statistics:
will meet Thurs., Oct. 19, at 4 p.m. in
3201 Angell Hall. R. K. Pillai will speakI
"On Stochastic Population Models."
Political Science Roundtable: Thurs.,
Oct. 19, 8:00 p.m. in Rackham Amphi-1

theatre. Panel discussion, "The Secre-
tary-Generalship and the Future of
the UN" by 'Profs. I. L. Claude; of Po-
litical Science, J. D. Singer of Mental
Eealth Research Institute, and Eric.
Stein of Law School.
Refreshments after the meetiing.
POSITION OPENINGS:
Michigan Civil Service-Position as
Public Information Executive for grad
with 7 yrs. exper. in publicity or pro-
motion work. Also position for Dept.
Technical Writer with BA in Journal-
ism or related field and .3 yrs. exper. in
journalism or other field requiring writ-
ing of speeches, articles, etc. Positions
in Ingham County. File by Oct. 30.
Mead Containers Div., Mead Corp.,
Flint, Mich. - Openings as Production
Trainees. & Sales Trainee for grads (1
Engdir. for Production & 2 others any
major). Exper. not necessary. Opper-
tunity for -men with leadership poten-
tial.
Mgmt. Consultants in East-Director-
International Operations to supervise
k direct the Corporate effort in area
of foreign operations. Degree in Chem.
with graduate degree in Bus. Ad. pre-
rerred and 8-10 yrs. exper. in, interna-
tional mgmt. and mktg. in chem. &'
Pharmaceutical industry.
All Products Co., Mineral Welsl, Tex.
-Antenna Engnr. -- BS or MS in EE or
Physics with strong interest in. com-
Mnunications fields. Will have full pro-
ject responsibility for elec. develop-
ment of antenna systems from con-
cept through production stage.
W. R. Grace & Co., Research Div.,
Clarksville, Marylafid - Many openings
for various types of Chemists (Organic,
Analytical, Polymer, - etc.) ES to PhD
levels & various amounts of exper. Al-
so positions for Physicists & Plastics
Development Engnrs.
Detroit Civil Service-Public Aid work-
er-grad with courses in Bus." Ad. and/'
or Social SeL. & some business exper.'
Detroit residence required. File'Iby Oct.
27. Also Historical Museum Asst. - grad
with specialization in History or re-
lated field and some exper. in profes-

mional museum work. Open to non-
residents. File by Oct. 26.
Please contact General Div., Bureau
of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for furth-
er information.
Part-Time
Employment
t'he 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
jobs should consult the bulletin board
in Room 2200, daily.
MALE
1-Room job, prefer graduate student
with car.
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.
-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.
1-English major, correcting papers.
FEMALE
2-Full-time waitresses, hours flexible.
1-Pianist, Thurs., Friday & Saturday
evenings.
2-Waitresses, 12-2:00 p.m., Monday.
thru Friday.
1-Full-time saleslady for women's
apparel, experienced.
6-Models. Must be size 12. 515" or
taller.1
5-Hostesses for opening of new Shop-,
ping Center, 'Wed.-Sat., Oct. 18-21.
Hours flexible. Must be size 12.
1-English major, correcting papers.
1-Waitress, Tues., Thurs., Fri., even-
ings, 10 p.m.-12 midnight.,
2-Fountain sales, work, 4-10:30 p.m.
5 days per week, four hours on Satur-
:ay.
gold bondl
deCaners

YOU Save,

22%

COMPLETE LINE OF BEAUTY WORK
605 E. WILLIAM
PHONE NI 8-7066
J6
BE AWARE of the factors on a dia-
mond that govern its real worth. 'In-
formation, NO 2-5685 after 6 p.m. J9
GIRLS! If your rooms need cheering
up, let THE WEE SHOP, 619 Packard
supply you - with potted plants,
planters, or dish gardens. J34
Tim's and Christine's
Tailor Shop
Alterations for men, women and
children.
NO 3-6228 213% S. Main St.
J31
STUDENTS-Neat, expert typing of your
papers, etc.; pickup and delivery In f
Ann Arbor. Electric typewriter. Call
GL 3-6258: J29
BEFORE you buy a class ring, look at
the official Michigan ring. Burr-Pat-
terson and Auld Co. 1209 South Uni-
versity, NO 8-8887. J1i
COME IN AND BROWSE AT THE

at
304 S. THAYER
ACROSS FROM HILL AUDITORIUM
Service and repairs by
Fred Flack, M.A.E.S.

TREASURE

MART

Xf

529 Detroit St.

NO 2-1363

C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
FRIENDLY SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS
It is fall change over time:- Time to.
check your cooling system and put in
ATLAS PERMA-GUARD anti-freeze.

Featuring student furnishings of all
kinds, appliances, typewriters, tele-
visions, bicycles, etc. Open Monday

and Friday Evenings 'til 9.

S4

THE JUNIOR-SENIOR COUNSELING OFFICE
AND THE MICHIGAN UNION

South University
NO 8-9168

& Forest
S2

present,

"TRAINING IN LAW"
second in a series

ATTENTION ROTC
OFFICERS' SHOES
Army-Navy Oxfords - $7.95
Socks 39c Shorts 69c
Military Supplies
SAM'S }STORE
122 E. WASHINGTON W6

LOST,& I N
LOST-Eye glasses, black and gray
frmes, white case. NO 5-7711, Ext.
6134. A41
LOST-small beige leather purse Sat.
afternoon between the Stadium and
Saline Rd. area. REWARD. NO 8-8472.
A36
WHOEVER took a red wallet from a
purse in the Union PLEASE return
all ID papers. A9

515 E. William

M- w-

loqm"---%

with

PROF. ROY L. STEINHEIMER
professor of law and admissions officer
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LAW SCHOOL

Odorless
Cleaning
correctly
finished
Free minor
repairs
Free Moth-
proof ing
Fast Service

WANTED: Ride to Gaylord-Petoskey
area, Oct. 20. Will share expenses. Call
Carol, NO 5-7711, Ext. 5212. G15
WANTED-3 man apt. near campus.
Call NO 2-3111. L12

w .. .:.. . ..sa .swaa. wv vaac:. a..aoy waasvy. a-.iv ,.
tiww .

.., .
_ ... ~

OCTOBER 19, 1961

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7:30 P.M..

Third Floor Conf. Room
Michigan Union

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MAKE-UP HEADQUARTERS
for HOMECOMING ...

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Complete Line of MAKE-UP

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has lull details. 0 "An equal opportunity employer

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