:,PAGE ;.EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAII.V PAGE. y ..::EIGH...T...T. ZifL' i CUJE.lai+V 1V ibACiiT. URBAN CENTERS: ERAP Acts To Organize Nation's Poor WUOM- Varied Programmi .(Continued from Page 1) up a number of groups on small- er issues that confront the unem- ployed, migrant workers and moth- ers on welfare. Davis explained that there are two theories or organization -- the single or multi-issue group. While Baltimore and Chicago test the single issue theory, Philadel- phia is a test of the latter one. Four out of 20 staffers are re- maining for the year. -Cleveland. ERAP is working in the near west end of the city a m on g southern Appalachian whites. "This is an important proj- ect," Davis said. "It is a real test of our analysis. ERAP is working in potentially a very racist com- munity. It has had a fair amount of success. I am excited about it." The project includes a union of the unemployed. ERAP is work- ing to improve conditions in a "very bad" housing project. It ha, also organized welfare mothers onJ other political issues than Onprov- in Hazard will be continued ing welfare. These women are cur- Appalachia-area project has rently passing out anti-Goldwater the only one subject to in leaflets in area stores. The six local harrassment, Davis said staffers who stayed for the year the project has not been ah will be aided by students from get' off the ground. Oberlin College some 40 mileE "There has been some se from Cleveland, Davis noted, intimidation of the peoplev --Boston. In this heavily de- ing with us. The sheriff and d fense-industry area, ERAP i, ties would bust into a me working with engineers and tech- expose their guns, line up ag nicians threatened by defense in- a back wall and say they aret dustry unemployment rather than to observe the meeting," he with the urban poor. ERAP has The Hazard project has published a weekly newsletter on aimed at improving schools the problem of conversion to providing federal relief pr peacetime work in its Bedford- as promised by the governme Lexhigton, Mass., project area. It The summer program cost has sponsored discussion groups AP $20,000, Davis estini and is pushing for contracts that "Funds are becoming an inc would guarantee peace time em- ingly critical need. ERA? wil ployment for these technicians anc to the campus to keep orgai engineers. A full-time, non-stu- gon.He aid th ERA dent project director has beer ne t.iHe said that ERAP hired. He will be aided by student need twice that sum to kee volunteers from area universities. -Hazard, Ky. There is some Foundations and unions doubt whether the ERAP project donating some money, he . The been ntense , and ble to erious work- depu- eting, gainst there said.. been and. ojects ent. ER- hated. reas- I look nizers will p go- are; con- tinued, but students themselves paid for much of the summer costs. ERAP will open its campus phase .this fall. "It will try to make students oriented to the war on poverty and legitimize the no- tion of demonstrations for jobs just like those for civil rights," Davis said. The project will seek to imple- ment a United States National Student Association resolution of cooperation passed this summer Davis continued. ERAP will look to the campus for research and help on local projects. It will encourage stu- dents to do research in relevant class assignments that would be helpful for the project. Students may be used to orga- nize nearby communities, provid- ing leadership training to the lo- cal poor, he added. Lastly, ERAP plans to launch a recruiting drive for 250 summer workers next year, Davis said. A portion of WUOM's record and tape library is shown above. The library contains about 8,000 records, most of which are classical. The station has on file 3,000 tapes devoted almost entirely to concerts or special productions prepared at the Uni- versity. :.. ":... aK r .[ v "rri s" ., ,. ...."...... :r~r.rY..Y. ":1"::"" Y"" :+v . . ...1. $ .:...... xfl.."{ .4N. " :tr r < . 1 a:. .N *, Y .. t.rv. }. W V.M.S.f. . . .1........ . A. . .}S.............: 4 The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publica- tion, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satur- day and Sunday. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Per- sonnel Techniques Seminar - George S. Odiorne, Professor of Industrial Re- lations, University of Michigan, "Hu- man Problems in Quality Control": Third Floor Conference Room, Michi- gan Union, 8:30 a.m. t Cinema Guild-Hitchcock's "The Lady Vanishes" with Michael Redgrave, Mar- garet Lockwood, and Paul Lucas, Archi- tecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m.r Doctoral Examination for Robert Ed- gar Krainer, Business Administration; thesis; The Relationship between For- eign Business Investments and Domestic, Economic Activity; A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis," Thurs., Sept. 24 816 School of Business Administration; at 3 p.m. Chairman, P. W. McCracken. State of Michigan Scholarship checks are now available at the Cashier's Of- fice, Administration Bldg. Lobby, Win- ners should present student identifica- tion. Windows are open weekdays from a to 4:30 p.m. Applied Mathematics Seminar: Prof. J. Goldberg will speak on "Some Math- ematical Aspects of Positive Real Func- tions," on Thurs., Sept. 24, at 4 p.m. In Room 246 West Engrg. Refreshments will be served in Room 350 West Engrg. at 3:30 p.m. General Notices Linguistics Dept. Doctoral Preliminary ORGAN IZATION' NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered'organiaztlons only Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Graduate History Club, Speech by Prof. Frank Grace, Political Science Department, "Relation of Contemporary .American Conservatism to Tradition- 'al European Conservatism," Sept. 24 8 p.m., West Conference Room, Rack- ham. , International Students Association. Japanese evening at the International Center, Sept. 25, 7 p.m. Le Cercle Francais, Le Baratin, le 24 Sept., le jeudi, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. * Examinations: The dates for the doc- toral preliminary examinations for the Linguistics Dept. are Fri. and Sat., Nov. 6 and 7. Any student who wishes to take a prelim this semester must no- tify the departmental office of his in- tention to do so and which exam he wishes to take before Oct. 1. Engineering Seniors and Graduate Students: The 1965 College Placement Annual, official occupational directory of the College Placement Associations, is now available free to seniors and graduate' students at the En~gineering Placement Service, 128 H, West Engrg. Bldg. Regents' Meeting: October 23. Com- munications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than October 9. The Mary Louisa Hinsdale Scholarship amounting to $214.40 (interest on the endowment fund) is available to under- graduate single women who are wholly or partially self-supporting and who do not live in University dormitories or sorority houses. Residents of Hender- son House and Oxford Housing may apply. Girls with better than average scholarship and need will be considered. The Lucile B. Conger Scholarship and Margaret H. Waterman Scholarship are offered to undergraduate women on the basis of academic performance, contri- bution to University life and financial need; the stipends are variable. The Julia Henning Conger Memorial) Fund Scholarship to cover tuition costs will be available to a resident of the Grand Rapids 'area, who is a woman studentadmitted for undergraduate study at the University. Equal weight shall be given to financial need, citi- zenship, and academic performance. The Laurel Harper Seeley Scholarship is announced by the Alumnae Council of the Alumni Association for 1964-65 The award is $210 and is open to both graduate and undergraduate women. It is awarded on the basis of scholarshipI contribution to University life and fi- nancial need. * * . Application blanks are available at the Alumnae Council Office, Alumnt Memorial Hall, and should be filed by Nov. 1, 1964. Awards will be granted for use. during the second semester, 1964-65 and will be announced Nov. 20, 1964. WED., SEPT. 30- John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., Detroit, Mich.-Will interview at Bureau on Sept. 30, afternoon only. Positions in Insurance for degree ma- jors in Gen. Lib. Arts, Hist., Philo., Psych. Make appts. at 3200 SAB or 764- 7460. Bus. Ad. candidates will be in- terviewed in the morning of Sept. 30 at the Bus. Ad. School. Make appts. at 254 Bus. Ad. Bldg. ANNOUNCEMENTS: Canadian Civil Service will hold its competitive examination on Oct. 21,1964 at Windsor, Ont. and a number. of other Canadian cities. This exam is open to all grads and university students, 31 yrs. of age or under, in Canada and abroad who expect to graduate in the spring of the following year. Openings include: Jr. Executive Officers, Foreign Service Officers, General & Personnel Admin., Economics & Finance, History Trade &= Commerce, Engrg., Physical Sci- ences and many- others. Brochures and applications are available at the Bu-, reau of Appointments. Applications may be filed in advance or you can take it with you to the examination center. POSITION OPENINGS: Ansul Co., Marinette, Wis.-Transpor- tation Technician & Packaging Co- ordinator. Various ed. bkgds. 1-2 yrs. traffic exper. pref. Blaw-Knox Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. - Development & Research Metallurgist. BS Metallurgy. 2 yrs. exper. in field. Weyerhaeuser Co., Tacoma, Wash.- Chief Cruiser. BS, 6 yrs. cruising exper req. in Douglas Fir region. Age 30-45. California Chemical Co., Toledo, Ohio --Sales Representative. Male grad. Lib- eral arts or Bus. Ad. Age 25-35. Im- med. opening. Steel Sales Co., Detroit, Mich.-Sales, Trainee. Recent or Dec. grad. Prefer engineer. For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap-, pointments, 3200 SAB. TEACHER PLACEMENT:1 Overseas Teaching-Applications for the Teacher Exchange Program must be received before October 15. Elementary and secondary teaching positions are available in Australia, Austria, Canada. Belgium, Cyprus, Denmark, Ecuador,s Finland, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Iran Italy, Japan, Morocco, Netherlands, Newc Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Paraguayt Peru, Sweden, Turkey, United Kingdom, Uruguay, and Viet Nam. College level positions are available in Australia, Cyprus, Denmark, Ecuador, Greece, Ice- land, India. Iran, Japan, Liberia, Paki- stan, Peru, United Kingdom. Summer seminars will be held in Itely, France, Germany, Colombia, Costa Rica, Spain for foreign language study, and in East Africa, France, Greece, India, Iran, Ja- pan, Mexico, and the Middle East for Social Studies. One year research and study grants will be awarded in se-1 lected countries for elementary and secondary school teachers and super- visors of social studies and/or modern foreign languages. In general the requirements include United States citizenship, a bachelor's degree, successful teaching experience approval of the school where the ap- plicant is now teaching, facility in read- ing, writing, and speaking the lan- guage of the host country, and some secial requirements for each type of grant. , For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB 764-7462. ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please sign interview schedules, posted -at 128-H West Engrg, for appointments with the following: MON., SEPT. 28- Smith, Hinchman & Gyills Assoc., Inc.-BS-MS: CE, EE & ME. Also Arch Dec. & April grads. TUES., SEPT. 29- Federal-Mogul-Bower Bearings, Inc. -BS-MS: EM, IE, ME & Met. Dec., April, June & Aug. grads. R. & D., Des., Produqtion & Sales. Inquire regarding summer employ- ment. Note: Both, companies will con- sider foreign nations if becoming U.S citizens. WED., SEPT: 30- Emerson Electric Co., St. Louis - various locations-BS: AE & Astro. & IE BS-MS: EE & ME. R. & D., & Des.' General American Transportation Corp., MRD Div., Niles, Ill.-All De- grees: AE & Astro. Prof.: Applied Mechanics. BS-MS: ChE. MS: EE & ME MS-PhD: E Mechanics. Dec. grads. R & D. & Des. -, WED., SEPT. 30; OCT. 1-2- IBM Corp., PhD's for Labs, in N.Y., Calif., Minn., Ky. & other centers- PhD: Communication Set., EE, EM, In- strumentation, Mat'ls., ME. & Met. Also: Physical Chem., Physics & Math on Sept. 30 only. Can consider non- citizens if intending to obtain citizen- ship. R. & D. By DONALD MLPPO WUOM-FM radio gives the tax- payer the kind of programhe wants-high quality programming, Station Manager Edwin G. Bur- rows said recently. Approximately 55 per cent of' the programming is classical mu- sic. The remaining time offers news programs, commentaries, discussions, drama literature, art and other general cultural ma- terial. The station receives 200-300 let- ters a week from listeners who appreciate a good radio station, Burrows said. The demand for the monthly program bulletin totals over 15,000, illustrating WUOM's popularity, he added. WUOM, 91.8 mc, is a Univer- sity-operated non-commercial ra- dio station. Located on the fifth floor of the Administration Bldg., WUOM broadcasts for an average of 70 hours per week. Beginning in October, it will be on-the-air from noon-11 p.m.. Burrows said the station's pro- grams vary from live University concerts to special documentaries pre-recorded for later broadcast. ,In addition to the regularly scheduled programs, WUOM has special features. Past series of this sort include "Human Be- havior; Social and Medical Re- search," "Assignment Latin Amer- ica," and "Toward Peace." The radio station not only pre- sents its own programs, but re- cords them on tape for shipment to other stations throughout the United States. Last winter it dis- tributed over 300 programs per week. This fall WUOM will broadcast the New York Philharmonic Or-+ chestra live from New York. It will also carry programs prepared+ especially for the station in Eur- ope. WUOM swill broadcast all the5 Wolverine football games and the+ major events of the other athletic teams, such as basketball and hockey. These specials will not' prevent the station from' continu- ing its regular programs of classi- cal music and Informational' items, Burrows said. For those interested in the presidential election, WUOM has prepared documentaries on the platforms of the two major poli-.- tical parties. Preparation began over six months ago. The informa- tion was taped for future presen- tation. The WUOM staff covered both political conventions. It concen- Stan Dilley, a studio engineer, prepares tapes for duplication trated on Michigan's role and the from one machine to another. A taped is "cued" for broadcast on operation of the Michigan dele- these same machines. gation, Burrows said. WUOM began broadcasting in 1948 as the first radio station at¢¢ }t f. * ±. the University. In 1960, WUOM ......... added another station, WVGR, :.... 104.1 mc.,. in Grand Rapids, to . transmit its programs.to an area not reached by WUOM. WVGRO... . . . .. .., broadcastis the same programs as WUOM, except for a few local: changes. Together the stations . cover southern Michigan and?:Y0... .c>:?< northern Ohio and Indiana. Being part of the University, WUOM is able to draw upon Uni-....... versity personnel and resources for }-}' half of its lecture series, Burrows said. WUOM is by necessity a profes- p h }... .;: sionally-operated station, with 25:i54: full-time employes and a large number of part-time employes. It is not a student-operated station. Students working there as pro- % . $. ducers, announcers and engineers are hired as part-time profession- als, Burrows said. No academic credit is given. Programs from WUOM are car- ried regularly by over 100 educa- tional stations, and reach people overseas via Voice of America. Be- ing a member of the National Edu- cational Radio Association, and having staff members who are of- ficials in other national radio organizations, WUOM can make contacts throughout the U.S. This results in better programming, Burrows said. 1 I .4 Illustrated Lecture: University lecture sponsored by Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies: Lecture I on ""Arab Architecture" with color slides in the two lecture series on Mosques and Fortresses of Islam, by Dr. George F. Hourani, professor of Islamic His- tory of the University, Thurs., Sept. 24, 4:10 p.m. in Room 203, Tappan Hall. Fall Semester Fees: At least 50 per cent is due and payable on or before Sept. 30, 1964. Non payment of at least 50 per cent by Sept. 30 will result in the assess- ment of a delinquent penalty of $5. Payments may be made in person or mailed to the Cashier's Office, 1015 Administration Bldg., before 4:30 p.m. Wed., Sept. 30, 1964. Mail Early. Mail Payments postmarked after due date, Sept. 30, 1964, are late and sub- ject to penalty.I Identify mail payments as tuition and show student number and name. MICHIGAN FOOTBALL Text by Donald Flippo Photos by James Keson Left to right are Abbie Van de Walker, freshman; Anna Mae Eply, senior; James Berge, sophomore; and Lois Caviani, senior, rehearsing for a "Festival of Songs" program. Playing the piano is Mrs. Ruth D. Clark, director of Festival of -Songs. r * Michigan Christian Fellowship, ture, "Faith . . . the Skeptic's form," by Rev. Carl C. Hart, p.m., Sept. 25, Michigan Union., s* * 41 Lec- Plat- 7:30 W MICHIGAN vs. AIR FORCE SATURDAY-i :15S P.M. BOB UFER SAG I Unitarian Student Group, Discus- sion, "A Doctor Discusses Euthanasia," Sun., Sept. 27, 7 p.m., 1917 Washtenaw Bus at Michigan Union, Markley, 6:44 p.m. WAA Folk Dance Club, Folk dance, with instruction suitable for beginners Fri., Sept. 25, 8-10:30 p.m., Women': Athletic Bldg. ** *** e American Society for Public Admin- istration, Coffee hour discussion, "Gold- water and Public Administration," Sept. 25, 4 p.m., Graduate Outing Room; Rackham. o\ Placement, PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad students, please call 764-7460 for appointments with the following: Note: If you plan to interview with the organizations that will visit the General Div. this year, be sure to reg- ister as soon as possible. Forms avail- able at 3200 SAB. The voice of Michigan Football for the past 19 years A HMAD JA MA L AND HIS RENOWNED JAZZ TRIO .&SEP.T'EMBE..R °d.......SATU RDaYr, r't t SEPTEMBER 26 8:30 P.M. . ya, ".: + Marie Woodford sorts song boks to be mailed to Michigan schools which participate in WUOM's "Festival of Songs" program. WUOM cooperates with nearly 25 other radio stations throughout Michigan to bring the series, to as many schools as possible. Oliver Hibbard, a studio operator, is shown here spinning the disks for one of WUOM's, regular classical music broadcasts. The station has four studios, allowing flexibility in broadcasting recorded or live programs. , , , , , j ' % s " t 4 _ . ,. ,.-. . . i } .{ " .} +i rte, : T.:iL frh ..--J"h'" v: v} };L''i'ix. - { E _...tiun nnrnn - ° -.::" is}:::->:-:a