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February 27, 1965 - Image 2

Resource type:
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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1965-02-27

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PAGE TWO

THE MICfHIGAN DAnIIu

QA+TTTvT' AV OM G+1.O27Yf t)tt Fnnia

a aa% 3 li Viii 11111 Ll'Yl iJl .,
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SAURAY 27 fltfnarFERUARY 1965 -

i'

WASHINGTON, D.C.:
View 'Limited' Summer Jobs

Acclaims Schonberg as
20th Century Beethoven

ACROSS CAMPUS:
'U' To Receive Shell Foundation Grant

f

The Shell Companies Founda-
By LAURA GODOFSKY lege students worked on Capitol grams have no, yet been worked Peter Yates, friend to Schonberg ONCE group that he applauds, tion has announced that the Uni-
Collegiate Press Service Hill-315 of them men and 185 out, and that in those that are and Stravinsky and apostle of the Yate's dislike of the Establish- versity is one of 206 universities
women. Of those, 273 were in the ready, opportunities are extremely avant-garde, sat puffing on his ment is extensive. and colleges to receive Foundation
WASHINGTON - Summer job House and 217 in the Senate while limited pipe Sensing that American culture education grants for 1965.
oprtnitiesy "ifedral aeies r 20 found work on committees. The State Department will hire "Charles Ruggles is to Ives as is on the verge of a "tremendous These Shell Fellowship grants
are generally "limited" this year, Many Functions 40 interns under a closed program. Webern is to Schonberg," he said, creative outburst," he sees in the in chemical and mechanical engi-
according to the Civil Service Summer employes and internm Letters were sent to 500 college and intimated strongly that it catholic approach of the local neering, each worth approximately
Commission. are given a variety of tasks on the presidents, asking each to nomi- was about time everyone knew it. avant-garde a democratic inclu- $5,000, will be awarded to gradu-
In Washington, employment will Hill. These may range from open- nate one student. From the pool, "Schonberg will be to the twen- siveness which will aid the gesta- ate students and young teachers
be particularly hard to get, and ing mail to researching legislation. 40 interns were chosen. tieth century what Beethoven was tion of the New, about to be born studying for advanced degrees.
preferenceee hosn.' iwillnurywgo Betovn juniors, ew abuttoben-n
preference will go to juniors, sen- Student aides also write letters The State Department will also to the nineteenth," he remarked, of the triple parenthood of Schon-
lors, and graduate students who and speeches and clip newspapers take on about 20 students, mostly and added a bit later, "and what berg, Ives and Cage. Schonberg Prof. Robert R. Miller, curator
apply before April 1. for congressmen. Negroes, as participants in a for- Monteverdi was to the seven- feels we are perhaps on the road of fishes in the University Mu-
As was the case last year, A number of special lectures and eign affairs scholar program. The teenth." to nowhere; Peter Yates has snif- seum of Zoology, will direct a two-
agencies are prohibited from hir- social events are arranged for program is run by Howard Uni- Yate's opinions are basic, some- fed the Renaissance. year study of "Evolution of Poeci-
Ing the children of their own civil- times upsetting, and often sc- Iaid Fishes," supported by a $19,-
Ian mploenoiforme ettohre mrsvv -msi co rn nvest r
sneo er uiformed er tillating. "Schonberg's Wind Quar- 100 grant from the National
ice members. They are also sup-t i eontinent e of Science Foundation. The research
posed to make all summer ap- twentieth-century music," he i s cncerns a family of small fishes,
mointmentns "without regard to many of which bear live young,
race, religion, sex, political, orstttsckhinter ned fordas.i rmdgu sn
nio Women
personal favoritism." .-ckitmnfodas Prof. Robert Noehren of the
Many agencies expect to hire f' mpesiv O}~music school and University or-
stenographers, typists, and otherf::.: It is hard not to be convinced n Contracts ganist played the dedication re-
clerical help to replace vacation- when Yates unfolds the stage-by-, cital on the new organ of Brick
Ing regular workers. Clerical pay sr rKk stage volution of contemporary (Continued from page 1) Presbyterian Church, New York
ranges from about $70 for fresh-msi of Cage's originated in a City, recently.
men ho cnnottypeto contversation with Peter Yates: room sizes and appeal for un- Lyrchord Discs has released
$86 for juniors who can. The out- " "Schonberg freed music from degauaes-leaving te campus fou new recordings featuring

jazz dance featuring dance stu-
dents of the Interlochen Arts
Academy as guest performers.
Due to inclement weather, the
University Concert Dance Organ-
ization will accept unused tickets
for yesterday's concert at the 2:30
p.m. and 8 p.m. performances to-
day. The dance concert will take
place at Lydia Mendelssohn
Theatre.
3:30 p.m.-Peter Hooper, Jr., of
the U.S. State Department's Of-,
fice of Southern African Affairs,
will speak on "The United States

the Recital Hall of the music
school, North Campus.
8:30 p.m. - The Netherlands
Chamber Choir, Felix De Nobel,
conductor, will present a concert
in Rackham Aud.
8:30 p.m.-The Kingston Trio
will give a concert in Hill Aud.
SUNDAY, FEB. 28
2 p.m.-The University Players
will present "King Midas and the
Golden Touch" in Trueblood Aud.
2 pm.-South African Students
Peter Davidson, Morley Nkosi,
'Magnus Gunther, Ben Vosloo, and

i

look is particularly bleak for the
former group.
Aides Sought
Some agencies will also seek
student aides in professional and
technical fields. Pay for aides
ranges from about $86 to $116 a
week, according to year in school.
Students who can get jobs in
Washington will generally get an
hour or two off each week to at-
tend a series of lectures by top
government officials. The series
often includes a session with the
President on the White House
lawn..
There is no central source of
Information as to the kinds and
locations of summer employment
opportunities. The Civil Service
Commission recommends direct
and early inquiry and application
to the particular agency in which
Work is sought.
On the Hill
Getting a job .on Capitol Hill
for the summer is much harder
than getting a job with an agen-
cy.
Unlike the civil service control-
led agencies, congressional em-
ployers often show political, per-
'sonal, geographical and even ra-
cial favoritism in their hiring
practices.
A student from Pennsylvania, for
example, has a greater. chance of
getting a job with a congress-
man from his own state than
with a representative of another.
A congressman from one's local
district is the best bet-particular-
ly if the student is willing to
work as a volunteer.
Last summer a total of 510 col-

dissonance; he should have gone
further and freed it from notes."
Yates has been around long!
enough to have found out every-
thing a perceptive professional
critic might know, and to have
gotten to know everyone. Yet he
has accomplished this without be-1
coming a journalistic hack or al
cynical mudslinger.,
In this context, as he travels
around this year on a Ford Foun-'
dation grant designed only to al-
low him to meet composers andE
poets, it is impressive that he
considers Ann Arbor a key bastion
in his defense of the progressive,
and a safe haven for a struggling
new art.
ONCE
It is of course the ONCE groupj
that Yates came to see, and the

OPPORTUNITIES WILL BE SCARCE this year for college stu-
dents to see the nation's capital as summer employes of the
federal government and it will be in particular difficult to get
a job on Capitol Hill, the Civil Service Commission says. Inter-
ested students should apply early.

graduate and married student I Noehren. The first of the record-
needs unsolved. ings was made in Denmark on the
Conveys Objections organ of Aarhus Cathedral. Noeh-
Cutler conveyed his objections ren is an organ builder, and the
to Weaver in a phone conversation other three discs are made on or-
yesterday. Weaver then cancelled gans he has built recently for
the prospective junior women ten- churches in Detroit, Chicago and
ants and added a release clause Howe, Ind.
to the temporary contracts he isS *R*F* 2
currently offering to all students. SATURDAY, FEB. 27
This clause provides that if the 9 a.m.-Dirk C. Rezelman of
Thi clus prvids hatif hethe Information Service of South
city inspectors do not find the Africa will speak on rThe South
building suitable for occupancy African Policiesk of Separate De-
by Aug. 10, the tenants can break velopment" in fthe Union Ball-
their lease with full refund of room,
their $25 deposit per man. 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.-The Uni-
However, Weaver stressed his versity Players will present "King
conviction that the structure will Midas and the Golden Touch" in
be completed with the possible Trueblood Aud.
exception of trimmings such as the 12:30 p.m.-Joseph B. Phillips
hallway carpeting. Once the struc- of the Ghana Mission to the UN
ture is completed, a permanent wfltheaGhn "MhesWonldOpn
University lease agreement will be will speak on "The World Opinion
sied. laegof South Africa" at a luncheon in
signed, the Anderson Room of the Union.
Referring to criticism by local Tickets: $1.65, at the S.G.C. Of-
architectural experts who have fikes.
predicted the building will never 2 p.m.-Seminar discussions will
be erected by August, he said "no be held in the 3rd floor Confer-
one around here has familiarity. ence Room of the Union as part
with this type of structure,"'' Ro fth no a at
-fof the United States National Stu-
Fabricated Steel dent Association's Conference on
He pointed out that it will be South Africa.
almost entirely constructed with 2:30 and 8 p.m.-The Concert
fabricated steel, under a "sophis- Dance Organization will present
ticated scheduling process" which a concert of classical, modern and
gives an almost day-to-day in-

THE CONCERT ORGANIZATION will present the 15th Annual
Spring Concert of classical, modern and jazz dance today at 2:30
p.m. and 8 p.m. Compositions entitled "Jazz Piece" and "Con-
versations" will feature students from the Interlochen Arts
Academy, while William P. Malm of the Music School will per-
form his original works 'More Maiku" and "Halcyon."

summer students and an interns'
newsletter is even published.
Although there are no avail-
able estimates on the total num-
ber of students to be hired in
Washington this summer, last
year's figures may provide an in-
dication of general trends.
Last year, it was predicted that
only 2000 students would be hired
in Washington. Judging, however,
from the number that attended a
lecture series sponsored for them,
there were nearly 6000 at work.
40,000 Hired
An estimated 40,000 students
were hired by federal installations
throughout the country.
A spot check of federal agen-
cies revealed that the details of
many summer employment pro-

versify with support from the Ford ;Tpfor I
Foundation.
Various agencies within the de- r
partment, such as the Agency for F ee E e ons
International Development and
the United States Information As many as 2000 college stu-r
Agency, have their own intern- dents may come to Washington,
ship programs, too. AID's, for ex- D.C., this summer to demand free
ample, is primarily for economics elections in Mississippi, the Stu-
majors. dent Nonviolent Coordinating'
Clerical Work Committee (SNCC) announced inI
In addition, the State Depart- This decisionad othe, w
ment hired about 130 clerical em- r hed acision, an ot ers, were
ployes last summer. In a much 12-19, of SNCC's Coordinaing
smaller program, the Bureau of Committee.
the Budget last summer hired The 2000 students will be used}
about 10 graduate assistants and as a "Washington Lobby" in the
a "few" clerk-typists, nation's capital. Members of the
The Defense Department hired "lobby" may engage in non-violent
60 typists and stenographers and direct action to gain support for
18 "student assistants." the challenge.

and South Africa" in the UnionE
Ballroom.C
4:30 and 7 p.m.-Marilyn Ma-
son, organist, will give a recital
in the organ studio, Rm. 2110f
in the music school, North Cam-
pus.
7 p.m.-The National Confer-I
ence of Christians and Jews (AnnI
Arbor chapter) will hold a "Broth-t
erhood Banquet" with featuredI
speaker Assistant Secretary off
Health, Education and Welfare
Wilbur J. Cohen. A fellowshipX
hour will begin at 6 p.m.I
'7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will
present Jean-Luc Godard's "My_
Life to Live" in the Architecture
Aud.
8 p.m,-The USNSA Conference'
on South Africa will sponsor an
international mixer and dance in
Union Ballroom.
8:30 p.m.-Barbara Urist, viol-
oncellist, will give a concert in
Dial 662-6264
3RD BIG WEEK!
Shows at 1-3-5-7:05 & 9:15
JAMES BOND IS
BACK IN ACTIONI

I

dication of progress.
This scheduling method, which
has been scorned by several Uni-
versity officials, is worked out by
a prominent auditing firm, Weaver
declared. He said the schedule
calls for the structure's comple-
tion by July 1, leaving nearly six
weeks for error.

DIAL 8-6416

I

The film makers
who brought you
A TASTE OF HONEY and
TOM JONES now take
pride in presenting...

Abraham Luckoff will hold a panel
discussion on "The Effects of
Separate Development of South
Africans" in the 3rd floor Con-
ference Room of the Union.
2:30 p.m.-The University Mu-
sical Society will present The
Detroit Symphony Orchestra in
Hill Aud. This concert replaces
the Polish Mime Theatre in the
Extra Series, originally scheduled
for February 23.
7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will
present Jean-Luc Godard's "My
Life to Live" in the Architecture
Aud.
DIAL 5-6290
Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M.
Yoo kaueR
red K~larex
Evy
Also-
TOM & JERRY
in
"THE CAT ABOVE
THE MOUSE BELOW"

t

4

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The Daily Official Bulletin is an women students who will be juniors speaker will be our new vice-president Tribes and the Procedure in the Tribal Law, Bus. Ad. or Econ. Exper, not req.
official publication of The Univer- the fall semester of 1965-66 and have a for student affairs, Dr. Richard Cutler. Assemblies." Investigate, negotiate & settle field
sity of Michigan, for which The grade-point average of 2.98 or better The afternoon program will include a Thursday, March 18-"The Centuri- claims. 6-8 mos. trng.
Michigan Daily Assumes no editor- are eligible to apply. Application forms panel presentation with discussion in ate Assembly in the Light of New Evi- Johnson Drug Store, Howell, Mich.
ial responsibility. Notices should be and further information may be ob- the student personnel area. Dr. Peter deuce." -Pharmacist, man or woman, BS
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to tained from Mrs. Florence Lyons, Of- Ostafin will moderate the panel. The location and time for each lec- Pharm, for immed. opening. Registered
Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fice of Financial Aids, 2011 Student Ac- We have scheduled individual in- ture will be Angell Hall, Aud. A, 4:15 $ or will consider apprenticeship.
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding tivities Bldg. Applications should be terviews for new transfer students. We p.m. School Equipment Mfr., Central Mich.
publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday completed and returned to Mrs. Lyons' have indicated in our letter to them ----- -cost Acet., recent or May male grad
for Saturday and Sunday. General office by March 15. Scholarship grants that they should be excused from class for immed. opening to handle all accts.
Notices may be published a maxi- will be based on 'need, scholarship and if there is a conflict with the inter- Plfle ne jj rec., accts. pay. & payroll. Exper. not
Inum of two times on request; Day extracurricular participation. view. However, if the instructor is giv- required.
Calendar items appear once only. ing an examination or has some other ANNOUNCEMENT: General Electric Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Student organization notices are not Annual Community College Counselor- compelling reason for the student to Babson Institute of Bus. Admin., -Immed, opening in motor engrg. sec-
accepted for publication. Student Conference: This is to invite attend class, he may come to Rackham Babson Park, Mass.-Announcec grad tion. BSEE or ME, 2-5 yrs. exper. in in-
you to attend the Annual Community for his interview anytime during the program leading to MBA in Acctg., duction motor des. field or recent grad
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27 College Counselor-Student Conference morning. Distribution, Finance & Prod. One yr. with interest in motor design field.
on Tues., March 2. We would also invite you to make study for BBA's, 2 yrs. for Lib. Arts * * *
any suggestion that would help us make & Engrg. degrees. Financial aid in- 1 For further information, please call!
Pa Calendar" The Conference format will be as fol this Conference more successful and cludes fellowships, scholarships, loans & 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap-
lows: Interviews with students who en- meaningful to all. work grants. pointments, 3200 SAB.
farfi+haT~i~arcf~7 o Afihirn n itm t,320SBI

'I

V:

Metropolitan " Detroit Science Club
Institute-Registration, Rackham Lob-
by, 9 a.m.
Unversity Players Children's Theatre
Production-King Midas and the Gol-
den Touch": Trueblood Aud., 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m.
Track - U-M vs. U.S.T.F.F. State
Champs: Yost Field House, 1 and 7
p.m.
Gymnastics-U-M vs. Indiana Univer-
sity: 'Yost Field House, 2 p.m.
University of Michigan Concert Dance
Organization Dance Concert-Interloch-
en Arts Academy dance students, guest
performers: Mendelssohn Theatre, 2:30
and 8 p.m.
Wrestling-U-M vs. Michigan State
University: Yost Field House, 3 p.m.
School of Music Faculty Recital
Marilyn Mason, organist: Organ Stu-
dio, 2110 School of Music (courtesy
tickets required), 4:30 and 7 p.m.
Cinema Guild-Jean-Luc Godard's
"My Life to Live": Architecture Aud.,
7 and 9 p.m.
School of Music Degree Recital-Bar-
bara Urist, cellist: Recital Hall, School
of Music, 8:30 p.m.
Chamber Arts Concert-Netherlands
Chamber Choir, Felix de Nobel, conduc-
tor: Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m.
General Notices
Delta Delta Delta Scholarship Com-
petition: Unaffiliated or affiliated

tered the University o micnigan in
1964, will be held between 8:30 a.m.
and 11:45 a.m. in the Rackham Bldg.
Coffee will be served in the Assembly
Hall with key University representa-
tives available for consultation be-
tween 10 a.m. and 12 noon. Following
the morning session, a luncheon will
be held in the Michigan League. The
ORGAN IZATION
NOTICES
Use of This Column for Announce-
ments is available to officially recog-
nized and registered student organiza-
tions only. Forms are available in Room
1011 SAB.
* * *
Graduate Outing Club, Tobogganing
and/or hiking, Feb. 28, 2 p.m., Rack-
ham, Huron St. entrance.

Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures for
1965: The Department of Classical Stud-
les presents the Thomas Spencer Je-
rome Lectures for 1965. Lily Ross Tay-
lor, professor emeritus of Latin at Bryn
Mawr College, will give a series of four
lectures on "The Roman Assemblies and
the Hannibalic War to the Dictatorship
of Caesar." The dates and titles are as
follows:
Tuesday, March 9-"Preliminary Pub-
lic Meetings in the Forum, on the
Capitoline, and in the Circus Flamin-
ius."
Thursday, March 11-"Voting Meth-
ods and Places of Assembly of Centur-
ies and Tribes."
Tuesday, March 16-'The Thirty-five
THIS GREAT CLASSIC BY

POSITION OPENINGS:
Mgmt. Consultants, N.Y.C.-1. Man-
ager for Chem. & Physics Research.
PhD in ChE, Chem. or Physics, in field
of energy conversion & combustion
with Res. Int. 2. Personnel Manager,
grad, exper, in personnel admin., re-
sponsible for function of plant per-
sonnel.
Continental Casualty Co., Toledo,
Ohio-Adjustor Trainee, recent grad in

PETER FINCH and
RITA TUSHINGHAM
GIRL WITH
GREEN EYES
CONTINUOUS TODAY
FROM 1 O'CLOCK

'
.

SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE:
212 SAB-
The following camps will interview
Wed., March 3, at 212 SAB:
Camp Robinson Crusoe, Mass.-Coed.
Ass't. head counselor, general & spe-
cial counselors.
Camp Tamarack, Mich.-Coed. All
types of counselors, especially unit
leaders 21 yrs. or older. From 9-12 &
1:30-3.

ISEAN cNNE07oo

"""""

"

II

qSntudent
oriented shopping
UflVRIYTOWERS

L

t1

"Leave
THE DEVIL'S
DISCIPLE*
exposed as
the threadbare
po pular melodrama
it technically is"
--G BS

i

George Bernard Shaw
CANDIDA
A MASTERPIECE
OF HIGH COMEDY
ANN ARBOR CIVIC
THEATER
8 P.M., March 4, 5, 6
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
TICKETS NOW ON SALE
Box Office open 10 A.M.-5 P.M.
Mail orders to P.O. Box 1993
Thursday, $1.50
Friday & Saturday, $1.75

0

i

The University Musical Society
presents
THE DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
SIXTEN EHRLING, Conductor
Sun., Feb. 28, 2:30 P.M.
IN HILL AUDITORIUM
Program
Prelude and Quadruple Fugue ...............Hovhaness
Symphony No. 1 in E minor ................ . . Sibelius
Symphony No. 1, Op. 10 ..:.............Skostakovich
ROSALYN TURECK
Pianist

I

fI

a

N16's. u

" Now renting for Aug. '65
NIVERSITY AVE. & FOREST AVE. PHONE:

7612680f

_ ;

'March 3-7,

8:00 p.m.

I

hk

U

I Irw w w r w w w w w r rw r w w r r w r r w w r
r r
If You Enjoyed BREATHLESS
You Must See Jean-Luc Godard's
__ MY LIFE TO LIVE
* ~.A itSO I
r r
The Academy Award-Winning Short
r r
THE GOLDEN FISH
III I I '

{
i
i
}
'

Ii

INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
ASSOCIATION

/

I

Monday,
March 1
8:30 P.M.

ALL-BACH RECITAL
Program:
Prelude and Fugue on the
Name of Bach
Capriccio on a Departing
Brother

All

11

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III

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