T1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY RNATIONAL STUDIES GRANT: j Ford Foundation Aid To Help 'U' Groups i (Continued from Page 1) tion of Japan," "The Cultural At- las of Japan," and a multi-disci- plinary survey of the country and its people. .The Center for Chinese Studies is planning two major un-dertak- ings, Prof. Albert Feuerwerker, di- rector of the Center, said. One project is a study of "Con- tinuity and Change- in Modern China" which will support, direct and integrate individual faculty research efforts. Prof. William B. Ballis, direc- tor of the Center for Russian Studies, explained that the grant would enable more research and teaching on the graduate level. He said that the center will be able to finance trips to Russia for in-the-field research, and fel- lowships in Russian studies to en- courage more graduate students to enter the field. The Center for Southern Asian Studies, directed by Prof. Richard L. Park, is conducting projects to prepare a basic course in Pashto, a dialect spoken in Afghanistan, to study urbanization in India, and to do an extensive survey on Southeast Asia for the Council of Foreign Relations. Prof. William D. Schorger, di- rector of the Center for Middle and Near Eastern Studies, ex- plained that more than 20 faculty members now teach courses con- sidering some aspect of the Middle East, and that the grant will en- able a collaborative research un- dertaking on "Cultural Continui- ties and Change in the Near East." The Program in Foreign and Comparative Law will expand four projects, now being undertaken, with funds from the grant, The program has an extensive collection ofrLatin American legal materials and hopes tb expand its research activities to include Lat- in America as soon as a trained staff person is found, Prof. Stein said. Prof. Hayes explained that the Center for Research on Economic Development is concerned with re- search and research training, rath- er than with courses. Two projects under considera- tion are studies of the flight of trained personnel from underde- veloped countries and the prob- lem of dual economies. Dean Floyd Bond of the busi- ness school explained that the grant will enable the school to develop the Program in Interna- tional Business Studies, designed to train administrators to work in the foreign branches of .cor- porations. Al foldi To Speak on Ancient .Latins Prof. Andrew Alfoldi will con- sider "Lavinium, the Leading Lat- in City in the Sixth and Seventh Centuries, B.C." in his fourth Thomas Spencer Jerome Lecture at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Aud. B. Statement (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the official Joint Judiciary Council statement on the ac- tion taken against Sigma Al- pha Epsilon social fraternity.) Michael Hiniker, president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon frater- nity, appeared before the Joint Judiciary Council on October 12, 1961, to answer questions concerning an incident in the chapter house on Saturday, Oc- tober 7, 1961. From his testimony and the facts given by the University investigator, it was determined that Sigma Alpha Epsilon was guilty of conduct unbecoming a student organization in that it held a party which was dis- orderly by its size and noise, and at which intoxicants were consumed with minors pres- ent. The Council has decided that Sigma Alpha Epsilon shall be fined $400.00 (payable by De- cember 1, 1961), and placed on social probation' until Decem- ber 1, 1961. The Council warns that any future violations will be dealt with more severely. i, fDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN s r r} rv .--r.^s s .r"L; cb .7r r"v (Continued from Page 4) Faculty, College of Architecture and Design. The freshmen five-week prog- ress reports (all grades) are to be sent to 207 Architecture Bldg. (Dean's Office) before 5:00 p.m., Wed., Oct. 25. Interdisciplinary Scholars Council will hold a public meeting at the Michigan Union at 7:30 p.m. on Thurs., Oct. 26. The topic of discussion will be: "Re- evaluation of the Student Opinion poll of the Faculty." Approval for the following student- sponsored activities becomes effective twenty-four (24) hours after the publi- cation of this notice. All publicity for these events must be withheld until the approval has become effective. Oct. 26-Michigan Daily, Daily-SGC+ Open Press Conference, Union Ballroom, 7 p.m. Nov. 5-Michigan Union, Political Rally, 3rd floor conference room, Un- ion, 7:30 p.m. Events Wednesday Mechanical Engineering Seminar: R. La Botz will speak on "Thermal Con- ductivity in the System Mg2 Ge-Mg2 Si" on Wed., Oct. 25 at 4 p.m. in 229 West Engrg. Coffee in the Faculty Lounge at 3:30 p.m. Events Thursday Carillon Recital: Percival Price, Uni- versity"Carillonneur, will present a re- cital on Thurs., Oct. 26 at 7:1;, p.m. in Burton Memorial Tower. Doctoral Recital: James J. Edmonds, pianist, will presesnt a recital on Thur., Oct. 26, 8:30 p.m., in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. Compositions he will play are by Haydn, Dello Joo, Galuppi, and Beethoven. This recital is presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Musical Arts. Prof. Ava Case is chairman of his doc- toral committee. Open to the general public. Illustrated Public Lecture: "The rule of Taste in 18th Century England" by John Steegman, of the Fine Arts Ad- It's not too late to sub- scribe to the Daily. Only 7.00 now for the rest of the year. visory Committee of the British Coun- cil; Thurs.; Oct. 26, at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. B.. Applied Mathematics Seminar: Dr. Hans Knobloch will speak on "Asymp- totic Integration of a Special Parabolic Differential Equation" on Thurs., Oct. 26, at 4:00 p.m. in 246 West Engineer- ing. Refreshments in 274 West Engineer- ing at 3:30 'p.m. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: California Packing Sales Co., Detroit Mich - Grad for position as Retail Sales Trainee. Job includes sales and sales promotion with opportunity to advance into supervision and mgmt. Age 22-28.: Location: Lansing. Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Philadelphia, Ann Arbor-Opening as Life Insurance Underwriter for grad with Liberal Arts or Bus. Ad. degree. Bkgrd in campus activities desirable. Regent grad or Jan. '62 grad. Area resi- dent preferred. Charles Bruning Company, Inc., De- troit, Mich.-Prefer Marketing Major for position in Sale-Detroit area. Indus- trial selling exper. preferred but not required if person has aptitude. Job includes sales of system, application of copying equipment to industry in general. Parsons Corp., Traverse City, Mich.- Aeronautical Engnr. for work in struc- tures - helicopter rotor blades. Aero or Mech. Engnr. with some exper. In structures. Willys Motors, Inc., Toledo-Junior Applied Mathematician for application of math to business problems. BA or, MA if possible. Will consider Women. Williams Gold Refining Co., Inc., Buffalo 14,N.Y.-Chemist to work on quality control process control & re- search programs. Would involve setting up analytical procedures for quality control of precious metals and their alloys. Please call Bureau of Appts., General Division., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for fur- ther information. SUMMER PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: THURS., OCT. 26 Camp Thunderbird & Camp Fern- wood, Poland, Maine-Charles King, owner and director of these camps will interview men and women counselors in room 3230 SAB from 9:00 on. Both camps require all types of counselors. People with camping exper. & who will be 20 yrs of age by June 60 may inter-I view. MON., OCT. 30 Camp Winnebego, Fayette, Maine - for boys. H. Lilienthal will interview' men for various counseling positions. For further information, visit Sum- mer Placement Service, 212 SAB. Open every weekday afternoon from 1:00 to 5:00 and all day Friday. 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 SAB, Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 11:30 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-Busboy, 12:00-2:00, five days per week. 3-SAlesmen, sell china & silverware, commission basis. 2-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-Ambulance drivers & attendants, experienced in first aid, Senior card in Red Cross. Night hours avail- able, 7 nights per week. -Several meal jobs. FEMALE 2-Full-time waitresses, hours flexible. 3-Waitresses, ,12-2:00 p.m., Monday thru Friday. 1-Full-time saleslady for women's apparel, experienced. 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 Sat- urday. 1-Waitress, Friday & Saturday eve- nings, 12 noon-8:00 p.m. Sunday; ORGANIZATION NOTICES Chess Club, Meetinig, Oct. 25, 7:30 p.m., Union, Rm. 3M. Beginners taught, competition for experts. Everyone wel- come, members and non-members. German Club, Coffee Hour, German Conversation and Music, Oct. 25, 2-4 p.m., 4072 FB. Newman Club, Oct. 25, 8 p.m., New- man Ctr. Speaker: Dr. H W. Bird, M.D. "Mental Health Career Opportunities." Rifle Club, Meeting, Oct. 25, 7:30 p.m., ROTC Rifle Range. Wesleyan Guild, Grad. Supper, Oct. 27, 5:30 p.m., Meth. Church, Pine Rm. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED IN AMERICA'S LEADING MAGAZINES DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS J. R. Wood & Sons, Inc., Dept. CP-21 216 E. 45th St.,,New York 17, N.Y. Please send me more facts about diamond rings and "Wedding Guide for Bride and Groom." Also name of nearest (or hometown) Artcarved Jeweler. I am enclosing 100 to cover handling and postage. Name Address City County or Zone_ state EVENING STAR First choice ofr America's College Queens C A -p f«' I -ya NTS TO KNOW YO yes of Jet Propulsion nt to meet with you want to talk to you your interests, am~ u feel about science L' i ° .. x a _ ... / r W A ,,,,, t p ,="'ri s'(b 't0 ,;y -fir 1 L ' ! ti ' w s ti - ti. ti r yam. . . =+i 4 /V ti w } ti ,PL WAI Representati Laboratory wa personally. They about you. About bitions and howyo and engineering in want to talk to you 2800 people in Pa a generaL. 0 They about JPL. About asadena, California that are mapping out many new missions into space. About JPL's Lunar and Planetary Programs and its three-nation Deep Space Instrument Facility. About the opportunities that exist at JPL for young men who only take know for an answer. o JPL wants to know you. Wehope you'll find time to meet with us.The Placement Office za dw r t A. r, -i ' 4 - .r M . ! , r.. ',