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December 19, 1962 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-12-19

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19,1962

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE FIVE

r

CONTROVERSIAL CAMPUS ISSUE:
Congress To Consider Aid to Higher Education

ICLASSIFIEDS

WASHINGTON (CWPS)-The
next Congress will hold hearings
on the imbalance of federal aid to
higher education--one of the hot-
test controversies on the American
campus.
Putting the problem before Con-
gress will be a House labor and
education subcommittee headed by
Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore). Aired
during these hearings will be many
of the problems cited recently by
Harold Orlans in a Brookings In-
stitution report, "The effects of
federal programs on higher edu-
cation."
After a detailed study of 36 col-
leges and universities receiving
varying amounts of federal aid,

Orlans spelled out the
this way:

problems{

Lists Problems
1) Leading universities with top
quality faculty are getting the
lion's share of the federal funds
for research in their science de-
partments. Some social science de-
partments are getting lesser
anzounts of aid while the human-
ities are being almost completely
ignored.
2) While the funds benefit the
science departments and faculty
of a few universities, it hurts
their education programs by keep-
ing the top professors out of the
classroom and in the laboratory.

9/9mh9 dome?
TAKE
WI LLOPOLITAN
Bus Service to the Airports
TICKETS ON SALE IN FISHBOWL
Mon., Tues., Wed.... 8:30-4:30

The federal money is putting
science faculty members in a
higher income bracket, and mak-
ing the best students wonder
whether a career in the humanities
is really worthwhile.
"It's awful short-sighted to keep
the best minds doing research,"
Orlans said, "when your scientific
progress depends upon the stu-
dents at the universities."
Federal Programs
A part of the solution to this
growing problem according to Or-
lans, is to broaden the federal
programs for large state univer-
sities.
"You can't expect a federal
agency to ask a small midwestern
university to undertake a program
that could only be handled by the
facilities at MIT," Orlans said in
an interview.
But, he added, the continued
concentration of the large-scale
research programs must be con-
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
Chess Club, Meeting, Dec. 19, 7:30 p.m.,
Union, Rms. 3K-L. Everyone welcome.
" r
U. of M. Rifle Club, Shooting Meet-
ing, Dec. 19, 7:30 p.m., Rifle Range.
* *"
Graduate Outing Club, Hiking, To-
boganning, etc., Every Sunday thru va-
cation, 2 p.m., Rackham Bldg., Huron
St. entrance.

tinued at the leading schools, but
that more projects, "for the smal-
ler but competent researcher,"
must be fostered.
Begin Programs
Both the National Science
Foundation and the National In-
stitute of Health have recently
started to do this.
At the NSF, where basic re-
search is primary, the universities
getting lesser amounts of, funds
are being helped. Starting in fiscal
1962, the NSF is granting funds
based on a percentage of the uni-
versity's over-all federal program
costs.
"This program lets the school
do whateverit wants. with the
additional money and generally
strengthens its science depart-
ment," Clyde Hall, a spokesman
for the NSF, said recently.
Double Amount
More than $6 million was giver
to universities under this program
during fiscal 1962, and the NSF
hopes to double that figure in
fiscal 1963.
The N a t i o n a l Institute of
Health distributed $20 million un-
der a similar program, but re-
quired it be used toward definite
programs in medical schools.
Orlans is not alone when he
reports that federal programs
must be directed at aiding the
man in the classroom. Agreeing
with him on this point is almost
every government agency contract-
ing research programs. Aiding the
educator was the recommenda-
tion of a presidential fact-finding

committee headed by Atomic
Energy Commission Chairman
Glenn Seaborg.
No Opposition
Capitol Hill sources are predict-
ing that Congress will eventually
direct a broadening of the dis-
tribution of research programs.
There seems little or no opposition
to such action.
Offering the biggest struggle on
Capitol Hill will be the problems
of aiding the much-ignored hu-
manities departments. Most hu-
manities support now comes in
the form of student aid, and a few
research and education projects
for various humanities programs.

Government education officials
said Congress could help most in
this field by creating aid prograns
to bolster these departments. How-
ever, hopes are dim that the fed-
eral government would create an
agency which would give support
to humanities on the scale that
science departments are getting.
Federal Aid
Social sciences, however, are be-
coming more aware of federal
programs which can improve their
faculty and department situations.
Orlans reports that federal aid to
the social sciences is drawing a
larger student enrollment, even
though natural sciences are get-
ting the largest slice of the pie.

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

I

The Daily Bulletin is an official
publication of the University of
Michigan for which The Michigan
Daily assumes no editorial responsi-
bility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564
Administration Building before 2
p.m. two days preceding publication.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19
Day Calendar
9:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Univ. of Mich.
and Bendix Systems Division of the
Bendix Corp. International Arms Con-
trol Symposium.
3:00 p.m. Dept. of Journalism Lec-
ture-Constantine Poulos, former spe-
cial correspondent for "The Nation,"
"International News: "A Weapon' for
World Peace": Aud. A, Angell Hall.
4:00 p.m. Dept. of Zoology Seminar-
Dr. T. M. Rizki, Associate Prof. of Zoolo-
gy, "Distribution Patterns of an Induc-
ible Enzyme during Development": Rm
1400, Chemistry Bldg.
4:10 p.m. Dept of Speech Student Lab-
oratory Theatre-"The Second Shep-
herd's Play" and "Anne of a Thousand
Days" (cutting) Arena Theatre, Frieze
Bldg.
8:00 p.m. *Basketball-U-M vs. San
Jose State Univ. Yost Field-House.
8:30 p.m. School of Music Concert-
Millard Cates, tenor; Eugene Bossart,
piano; Glennis Stout, flute; Louis Stout
French horn; Sharon Dierking, soprano
and Joan Luchs, piano; "Chamber Mu-
sic for Voice, Piano, Flute and French
Horn": Rackham Lecture Hall.
General Notices
Library Hours During Christmas. Va-
cation.
The Univ. libraries will be closed
Dec. 23, 24, 25, 30, and Jan. 1.
Libraries will be open on shortened
schedules beginning Dec. 20 through
Jan. 2. The General Lib. and Under-
grad. Lib, will be open from 8 a.m. to
6 p.m. during the holiday period. The
shortened schedules of the divisional
libraries will be posted on the lib.
doors.
Parking: Two floors of the new park-
ing structure on Thompson Street will
open Thurs., Dec. 20 to staff parking.
The entire building will be open about
Feb. 1.
Math 495 quiz will be given in Aud.
A, Angell Hall on Wed., Dec. 19 at 11
a.m.
The approval of the following stu-
dent-sponsored activities becomes ef-
fective 24 hours after the publication
of this notice. All publicity for these
events must be withheld until the ap-
proval has become effective.
Voice Political Party, Organizational
meeting, 1/8/63, 7:30 p.m., 3RS Union.
Voice, Jan. 7, 1963, Table in Fishbowl,
9:00-5:00, Fishbowl.
Placement
Abraham & Straus Christmas Vaca-
tion Career Breakfast-Juniors & Sen-
iors interested in a department store
career, attend the breakfast on Friday,
Dec. 28 from 9:00 to 11:00 at the Fourth
floor restaurant. You will hear talks
by A & S executives and may be inter-
viewed for the Exec. Trng. program if
you wish. Make your reservation by noon
Thurs., Dec. 27.
POSITION OPENINGS:
City of Bangor, Maine-Opening for
Public Health Officer in Health Dept.
Will consider lay health officer with
master's degree in public health admin.

OR will consider a medical health of-'
ficer for combined positions of Public
Health Admin. & Medica Dir.
U. S. Civil Service-Detroit Arsenal-
Openings for Supply Specialists-Pro-
gressively responsible exper. in admin-
istrative, supervisory, planning or tech-
nical capacities.
State of Virginia Civil Service-Many
and various openings including: Social
Workers, Accountants, Tax Examiners,
Chemists, Biologists, Botansts, Econo-
mists, Geologists, Physical Therapists.
etc.
Michigan Civil Service-1. Disability
Examiner II-BS with specialization in
a field related to rehabilitation plus
1 yr. exper. 2. Sanitarian II-BS in
science plus 1 yr. exper. 3. Workmens
Compensations Hearings Referee-Ad-
mission to Mich. State Bar plus 2 yrs.
exper. Apply by Jan. 7 for the above.
Management Consultants in East-
Client firms seeking highly qualified
men for the following positions: 1.
General Marketing Manager. 2. Direc-
tor-Operations.3. Dir. of Industrial Re-
lations.
B. F. Goodrich Co., Akron, Ohio-1.
Product Engnr.-Textiles - Mech. or
Chem. Engnr. with strong interest in
use of textiles & some metals in the
rubber industry. 2 Sr. Cost Acct.-De-
gree Bus. Ad. with Acc't major plus 2
yrs. cost acc't. exper.
Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis, Ind.-;
Seeking personnel with following aca-
demic bkgrds.: Scientific - BS Bacti.,
Med. Tech., Pharm. Chem. MS Micro-
biology, Bacti., Chem. PhD Biochem.;
Administrative: MS Accounting; Engrg.
BS Met., Mach. Indust., & Chem. MS
Indust. & Met. Engrg.
* * a
For further information, please call
General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200
SAB, ext. 3544.
Events
Doctoral Examination for Hansford
Threlkeld Shasklette, Botany, thesis:
"Influences of the Soil on Boreal and
Arctic Plant Communities," Thurs.,
Dec. 20, 1139 Natural Science Bldg., at
at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, W. S. Benning-
hoff.
Doctoral Examination for Sing-Chih
Tang, Civil Engineering; thesis: "Dy-
namic Response of a Thin-Walled Cyl-
indrical Tube under Internal Moving
Pressure," Wed., Dec. 19, 305 W. Engin.
Bldg., at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, B. G.
Johnston.
Part-Time
Employment
The following part-time jobs are
available. Applications for these jobs
can be made in the Part-time Placement
Office, 2200 Student Activities Bldg.,
during the following hours: Mon. thru
Fri. 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 1:30 til 5 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring students
for part-time or full-time temporary
work, should contact Bob Hodges, Part-
time Interviewer at NO 3-1511, Ext. 3553.
Students desiring miscellaneous odd
jobs should consult the bulletin board
in Rm. 2200, daily.
MALE
2-Russian Voicers. 10 to 15 hours per
week.
1-Dishwasher in exchange for lunch
and dinner,
12-Registered Ann Arbor voters to
circulate petitions door-to-door 4
to 5 hours per day. Starting as soon
as possible thru Jan. 1st.
FEMALE
1-Steno-typist to work Tues. evenings
from 4 to 5:30 or 6:00 p.m.

PERSONAL
SELAGINELLA and ALLOMYCES wish
ALYSSA KAHN a Happy Birthdayi F27
CO-EDS HATE YOU, Wexner
P26
TUTO: Get out from under that mistle-
toe and have a great vacation-your
roommates, too. The girls on Hill F24
AUSTINrDIAMOND CORPORATION -
"Where marginal prices buy quality
diamonds1" 1209 S. University. 663-
7151. F43
WANT TO ESCAPE? Try art. Try Gen-
eration staff. We need you. For infor-
mation call John Herrick, editor, NO
3-2273 or NO 2-3241. You too can
speak for your generation. 11
BERMUDA COLLEGE WEEK is "Where
the Girls Are" for Spring Vacation.
More info after Xmas. P17
GLEE CLUB RECORDS ON SALE TO-
DAY IN THE FISHBOWL. F12
LOOKING FOR Christmas gifts? Why
not give Glee Club Records(and keep
one for yourself)? Michigan Men's
Glee Club records, "On Tour" and
"White Tie and Tails" are on sale
today through Thursday, 8:00-5:00. F11
A NEW YEAR'S TOAST
From the Boys of
Huber, Gomberg,
Taylor, and Frederick
To Next Year's Girls
of Van Tyne, Scott,
Reeves, and Kelsey.
F25
USED CARS
NEED CASH-1962 VW, good condition.
Call NO 2-2354 around 5 p.m. N4
'55 2-DR. CHEV. Good clean car, stand-
ard trans. $325. HU 2-9425.
MUSICAL MDSE.
RADIOS, REPAIRS
FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY on
radios, phonos, tape recorders and TVs
with this ad. Campus Radio & TV,
325 E. Hoover. X9
A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS
BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washingtbn
MISCELLANEOUS
PADLOCKS, NITE LITES,
SNACKS ON THE RUN,
NYLON STOCKINGS & MQUSE TRAPS.
You name it, we have it at .. .

936 N. Main

WANTED TO BUY
WANTED TO BUY: Raccoon coat. Call:
NO 3-0787. K16
HELP WANTED
WANTED-Male or Female Persons who
are registered voters of Ann Arbor to
solicit petition signers. Work 3-8 p.m.
daily until December 31st. Excluding
Christmas eve and Christmas day.
For interview please apply apartment
1109, 'West building, Huron Towers,
Thursday, December 20th, 11-2:00 p.m.
or phone NO 5-9161. H48
FOR RENT
APT. TO SHARE with female during
second semester. NO 5-0393. C15
1326 GEDDES (Geddes near Forest).
New 2-bedroom apt. completely furn-
ished. $185. Call NO 3-8866. Mr. Skol-
nik. C16
ROOMMATE for new 4-man apt. 629
S. Forest. 2-4044 or 5-9893. 017
2 14-story towers overlooking Huron
River. Game Room. Swimming Pool.
Balconies and covered parking. Stu-
dio, 1, 2, 3-bedrooms. $113-312.
HURON TOWERS
2200 Fuller Road

CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
DO YOU OWN A
VOLKSWAGEN?
If you do, you should know
abou Ann Arbor's only
VOLKSWAGEN
and Porsche service specialists
AI R-COOLED MOTORS

NO 3-0800

NO 5-9162
C14

665-0051
665-351

SPACIOUS one bedroom apt. for
available Feb. Very quiet. Call Li
at NO 2-1149.
APARTMENT available for Jan.
Suitable for 1 or 2. 663-1692.
NEW FOUR Person Apt., ultra-mod
1000 Oakland. Ideal lodation. NO
8928.
2 BEDRM. cottage at 'Portage L
Completely furn'd. 15 mile drive
A.A. $75/mo. plus utilities. Call1
5580 after 6.

RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard

Mu

I

F

hNI

WASHTENAW CAFE
GERMAN AND AMERICAN CUISINE
We specialize in
German foods.
STUDENT SPECIALS DAILY
211 N. Main
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED to Philadelphia via
turnpike. Lv. Dec. 21. Ret. Jan. 3.
Round trip $20. Call 449-2509. G7
WANTED: Riders Boston to Ann Arbor
Jan. 2. NO 2-2242. 06
RIDE WANTED to Traverse City area
on Thurs., Dec. 20. Call NO 3-1561,
Ext. 921. G3
NEED ROUND-TRIP ride to N.Y.C.?
Leaving 8 a.m. Thursday. Call 5-7
p.m. NO 2-9517. 09
FOR SALE
GLEE CLUB RECORDS ON SALE TO-
DAY IN THE FISHBOWL.
FOR SALE - '61 Corvette convertible,
perfect condition, 15,000 miles. Call
Marge Gordon at NO 3-9365. B23
LARGE, HEAVY-DUTY wooden tables,
suitable for housing unit dining or
private work tables. Call Don Mac-
ritchie, 5-9193. B21
BEAUTIFULLY FINISHED light brown
stereo console phonograph. Practically
new. Good condition. Reasonably
priced. Inquire at 1811 Washtenaw or
call 3-0280 today. B28
CHRISTIAN ENTERPRISES
STORE
3650 CARPENTER ROAD
PHONE-NO 8-9629
Open: Mon., Fri., Sat.-8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tue., Wed., Thurs.-8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Furnishings for home or apartment.
PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE
10% off on all furniture and appliances
TVs from 22.50 up
Refrigerators 29.50 up
Studios 39.50 up
reupholstered
Hide-a-Beds 64.50 up
reupholstered
Washers 22.50 up
We have all kinds of chests, desks,
china cabinets, antiques, bric-a-
brac, toys, lamps, tables, clothing.
BARGAIN CORNER

ACT NOW
Studios from $111.00
1-bedroom from $130.00
Bus transportation to campus
and Ann Arbor business districl
HURON TOWERS
NO 3-0800, NO 5-9162
STUDENTS
Several apartments available to
share in campus area
APARTMENTS, LIMITED
NO 3-0511 Evenings
NO 5-9271
WANTED TO RENT
GARAGE WANTED
Vicinity of Canterbury Rd., Ann A
Woods, John Allen School or SoU
east Ann Arbor area. Phone NO 5-
after 5 p.m.
BUSINESS SERVICES
The Hairiest Shop in Town
M-DEN BARBERS
across from the Hill Auditoriumh
Basement of Michigan Pharmac
665-8184
Manuscript typing, transcription, m
cal, legal, technical confereh
mimeographing, offset. Quick, a
rate, experienced. Professional Se
Associates, 334 Catherine.
NEED TYPING DONE? Excellent ty
will do it for you at low rates.4
NO 2-4782 for information.
FOR THE FINEST SELECTION of p
favors and unique gifts contact B
Mor Agency, 1103 S. University,
2-6362.

r 2
arry
012
27.
C40
ern.
5-
Cl
ake.
to
09
ct.
C45
rbor
uth-
9429
i
316
edi-
nces,
ccu-
rvice
J11
ypist
Call
J24
party
Bud-
NO
J4

IMPORTED GIFTS
JEWELRY
SILK ROBES
BRASS WARE
WOOD CARVINGS
LACQUERED WORK
INDIA ART SHOP
(across from the Arcade) Hours: 9 A.M.-8:30 P.M.
. ^.N

MANUSCRIPTS, TERM PAPERS typed,
Multilth Offset for reproduction,
Photo copy, mailings. Gretzinger'.
Business Service, 320 S. Huron. HU
2-0191, 38
i :1

ATTENTION ROTO
Officers' Shoes
Army-Navy Oxfords-$7.95
Socks 39c Shorts 69c
Brasso 69c
SAM'S STORE

The
MICHIGANENSIAN
is only $5.00
"Ensianthe
yearbook that's
Your book"

LOST AND FOUND
LOST-I. Sc. and B. Soc. C. Parkhani,
Phone : 662-9886 A13
LOST- Light brown glasses, orange
case. 333 Mosher, NO 3-1561, Ext. 1041.
A12
FOUND-Black girl's glasses Thurs.
nite front of Angell Hall. Call 3-2870
A14

The gift with no strings attached

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