r ..rrr rr i i i iY urr rrrrrrrnr inlrrwM n Spencer Appointed Secretary LSA Boasts Lowest.Rate Of Dropouts POSSIBLE REFUND: Musician's Board To R On Charles-SRB Case -Daily-Edward Langs NEW SECRETARY-Jean Spencer, '61, has assumed the duties of administrative secretary of SGC, replacing Mrs. Julia Siegman. The office of the administrative Activities Bldg. opposite the office ecretary is presently located:in of the SGC president. he third floor office. of the Dean The SGC library, of which Miss ifMebuwilsotybmoe Spencer will be librarian will also SMen, but will shortly be moved be located on the first -floor along the first floor of the Student with an office for members in the present secretariat area. Miss Spencer stressed the need t P redicts of having the office "with the oth- er Council offices so the secretary knows what has to be done" in- e it eastead of on the third floor "where no one knows it exists." New Program Lowers Total Intern Figure A recently instituted certifica- tion program for foreign medical school graduates has redudced the number of foreign interns by 792 from last year. This program was initiated by the Educational Council for For- eign Medical Graduates of the American Medical Association tc assure that foreign interns met American medical standards. While the number of foreign in- terns decreased, the number of foreign doctors in residence in- creased sufficiently to bring the RICHARD NOHL total number in approved training SGC president programs up by five per cent.- _________________________ It -predicted a more strict en- forcement of the law regarding the return 'of such students to their Conference native land upon completion of the training, and the consequeni To Exainereduction in the total number or current duty in this country. r The AMA Council also reported State Finance on the formation of an Advisory Committee on Internships and Ways of improving Michigan's Hospital Serevices to "consider methods of producing a more ap- conomy will be discussed at a propriate balance . between the Jniversity conference on "Manage- number of approved internship, nent Action for Michigan's Fu- and the number of available can. ;ure" at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Rm. didates. - L31 of the business school.- Roblee B. Martin, chairman of School Announces Michigan Industrial Ambassadors' . executive committee, will give the Nursig Course The academic dropout rate in he University'sliterary college is she lowest in the country among iniilar colleges in state-supported universities, Associate Dean of the iterary college James H. Robert- on told an orientation gathering esterday.. Only about 10 per cent of liter- ry college freshmen fail to enter their sophomore year for academic reasons. A major reason for this achieve- mient, Dean Robertson said, is the high standards already set by in- coming freshmen. However, he predicted that the average freshman in the literary college will drop oat least a point from his high school grade mark and the average transfer student half a point. Dean Robertson then assured the several thousand freshmen'and transfers in Hill Auditorium that letters will soon be sent to parents explaining the competition for grades job Seeking To Hit Peak, During -Fall University job interviewers will see more than 600 students this month in the peak of the fall Job hunting season. With the semester not yet un- derway, "University' Part - Time Employment Service interviewers are talking to approximately 20 students daily. Job opportunities for this sea- sonl will be "slightly better" thai last year as a result of the Job- lean summer of 191, Robert K Richards, employment service manager in the University per- sonnel office, noted. Forsees lack However, the job-hunting pace will slacken by October, and i will be the students who acted quickly who will be holding or en- tering jobs, John Lard ie, an em- ployment service interviewer, not- ed. About 400 students will b placed in University and Ann Ar- bor Jobs this month. Last year the office was able to place 340 students in Jobs o of the 500 who applied. Opportunities for women exis in clerical work and meal Job in sororities and residence hals and some may find jobs as stir dent.dassistants. List Opportunities . Openings for men include wor- in University libraries and assist ants for faculty researchers. The employment service wil place a third of the job applicant in offcampus positions in A Arbor homes and businesses. Some odd jobs being offered consist of light and heavy house work and will be offered to me and women through the Part. Time Employment Service, locat- ed in Rm. 2200, Student Activi ties Building. By SANDRA JOHNSON Negotiations are still pendingc with the Executive Board of ther American Federation of Musicians which will decide whether or not Ray Charles, Inc. will be requiredY to refund money to the Universityt Development Council and the Stu-K dent Relations Board, the Bud-, Mor Agency, which is handling the case, said yesterday.' If refunded, the money would be' used to return to the purchasers the second half of the money they paid for the tickets to the concert last spring and to replace funds spent on publicity and other pre- parations for the concert. Half of the ticketholder's money was refunded by the council andy the board after the last part of the Ray Charles concert had to be; called off because Charles did not arrive from Chicago. Blamed Weather The evening of the concert Charles said he had not come be- cause inclement weather had pre- vented his flight in his private plane. However, because the contract signed by Ray Charles, Inc. was, not kept, the board and council placed the case before the Ameri- can Federation of Musicians in an. effort to have their $1,800 deposit plus their expenses returned, Richard L. Kennedy of the Devel- opment Council said. Ray Charles, Inc. was given 90' days to reply to these allegations. Through the Bud-Mor Agency, the board and council presented their rebuttal to the union. Since then Ray 'Charles, Inc., has re- plIed with its rebuttal. 2 Sore Hand In their reply Ray Charles, Inc., - explained Charles' absence by say- ing that he was under a doctor's care at that time for a sore hand, not that bad weather had pre- vented his trip. Kennedy pointed out that when he presented two concerts. two days later his hand was bandaged. So there is evidently some validity to Charles' claims, although the seriousness of the injury is yet to be determined. Moris Richman of the Bud-Mor Agency also added that the entire first part of the program was pre- sented as booked, so the concert- goers did s'ee at least half of the full performance. The decision as to whether Ray Charles, Inc., will have to give the money remains for the union's executive council to determine at, a later date. Groups Set Work' Rules. t 1 1 t 1 a Workers with strong group loy,- alties are not always the best pro- ducers as they. set their own standards, which may be high or low, Rensis .Likert, director of the University's Institute for Social Research, noted. It is a major responsibility of management to make the goals of the informal group coincide with those'of the entire organiza- tion, Likert stated in his recently published book, "New Patterns of Management. Membership to a highly loyal work group gives the individual a feeling of support and security, even when he is restricting pro- duction, he said. These groups tend to boost rather than curtail output. They promote an easier flow of work between members in consideration of individual loads. Members of these groups tend Pl.an To Aid' Adj us I ment In recognition of the difficulties faced each year by thousands of manual workers forced into retire- ment, the University is beginning a two-year research project to de- velop and test materials and tech- niques for a pre-retirement educa- tional program for hourly-rated workers. The project will also determine the effects on such a group who find the sitlation of reduced in'-. come and loss of social status, combined with the great increase in leisure time and disruption of well-established patterns of daily life a critical change. The project will represent the combined efforts of the gerontol- ogy division and the Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, a joint organization of the Univer- sity and Wayne State University. It will be directed by Woodrow W. Hunter of the two organizations. The United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Office of Education will provide! $75,000 which represents a major share of the project's cost. Four specific types of materials will be prepared: subject matter booklets; a handbook of case his- tories; ,a'series of short, descriptive. motion pictures and a discussion leader's: manual.,' Workers participating in the program will be at least 60 years old, gainfully employed in the same kind of industry and residing in the same or neighboring com- munities. About 120. persons will take part in the project, half of them in experimental groups and half in control groups. PAPER-BOUNPDPB Huge stock for all classes PROMPT SERVICE On Special Orders . OVERBECK'S. BOOKSTORE 1 I i The first session of Nursing 100 will meet at 3 p.m. Monday in the Natural Science' Aud., the nursing school has announced. to have lower. absentee' rates as they have a favgrable. attitude toward their job' and company, Likert added. Some of the nation's'best man- aged and most efficient firms rely on a pyramid of informal groups to - coordinate company activities at the various corporate levels from worker to president. To be most effective, these groups must serve as communica- tion channels throughout the company structures, Likert ex- plained. This communication can be achieved through the "linking pin" structure of these groups where members carry ideas and attitudes from one level to anoth- er. Booth To Aid Grad Students The Graduate Student Council has set up a booth in Rackham Bldg. to aid in orienting incom- ing graduate students. Aside from answering the ques- tions of 'incoming graduate stu- dents, GSC members distributed various registration materials for the graduate school. The council had earlier mailed handbooks and a map of Ann Ar- bor to the 1,500 incoming gradu- ate students. The' materials con- tained suggestions to aid the ori- entation and statistics about the Ann Arbor area., The GSC also, is circulating a petition asking Congress to make changes in' the income tax law to aid graduate students. It asks that an additional $600 exemption be given to self supporting graduate students, that tax allowances be made for direct educational ex- 'penses, and that similar provi' sions be made for research as- sistantships. George Sollish, GSC president, estimated that several hundred graduate students have already signed the petition. :I I English Lightweight Bike $4 95 Reg. 47.95 Value I with FREE saddle baskets, chain lock Men's Black,-Ladies' Green FULLY GUARANTEED REPAIR PARTS READILY AVAILABLE FULLY EQUIPPED BIKE REPAIR DEPT. , r'y 'a ,-p:.::;:; :., ,. s . .: ;;. Li::: ' ', 44,'x:; ,:i:S: ):;:i;{.::??_: :^ii ."::: { h ::::. , }" ; ; 1