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September 27, 1963 - Image 5

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The Michigan Daily, 1963-09-27

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Lt63 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

''

Branches, June Enrollment Grow in U.S.

For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786
from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 9:30 'til 11:30 A.M.

Trends toward branch colleges
and June enrollments were report-
ed in two recent surveys by the
Joint Qffice of Institutional Re-
search.
Fifty-four state-supported uni-
versities maintain 252 branches
in 39 states, a recent survey re-
vealed.
Surveying for the State Univer-
sities Association and the Ameri-
can Asociation of Land Grant
Colleges and State Universities, the
joint office report indicated that
branch colleges are becoming more
numerous and hence taking some
of the pressure off the large state
institutions.
New Branches
' Twenty years ago, branch col-
leges were nearly nonexistent
while two years ago there were
only 214.
The survey placed the 252 pres-
FOOTBALL
SPECIAL
All Transistor
Pocket Radio
$500
10 Transistor
Pocket Radio
W/ Batteries-Earphone-Case
$1300,

ent branches into three categories:
1) 139 Undergraduate schools
offering at least two years of a
regular four year course, open to
full time students;
2) 91 Extension centers offering
degree-credit courses, usually in
the late afternoon or evening to
part time students; and
3) Technical institutes offering
technical courses to full time stu-
dents who get an associate (two-
year) degree upon graduation.
'Slow Blooming'
Branches relieve the pressure on
the larger institutions while allow-
ing "slow blooming" students to
attend college, the report asserted.
The standards of the branch are
upheld by the parent institution,
since the latter grants the de-
grees.
At least four state universities,
the report said, saved private city
colleges from collapse in the last
two years. The institutions being
"revitalized" are Buffalo Univer-
sity, Houston University, Wichita
and Kansas City University.
The second survey shows that
more and more freshmen are
choosing to enter college in June,
responding to an emphasis on
year-around operation and a de-

Of 54 institutions studied, June
enrollment increased at 19, re-
mained unchanged at 21 and de-
creased at eight. Six institutions
said they have no June admit-
tance.
Nearly twelve colleges and uni-
versities have been actively en-
couraging June entrants. They
have reported a gradual increase
in June enrollments over past
semesters.
Four institutions reported they
had plans to attract June entrants
while two others said they had
offered small scholarships to stim-
ulate June applicants.

The report noted that 33 insti-
tutions made no effort to attract'
students to enter in June.
No Effort
Several institutions reported a
connection between summer en-
rollment and economic conditions.
One institution reported that
higher enrollment in June was
due to a lack of job opportunities
in the area.
But another, in an area where
jobs are plentiful, said that many
freshmen who would have chosen
to enroll in the summer worked
instead to earn money for utition.

BIKES AND SCOOTERS
MAN'S ENGLISH BIKE. $30. NO 3-1379.
Z23
1960 CUSHMAN SCOOTER-New paint
lob. Call 662-7880. Z22
1957 ZUNDAPP, 200 c.c. $250. A great
cycle. 338 E. Catherine, Apt. 3. See
Loren Sears. Call 662-8406. Z21
LAMBRETTA, VESPA, YAMAHO cycle
7 H.P. Your choice, $375 full price,
delivered Ann Arbor. Windshield and
parts mailed C.O.D. DI 1-3197, 7343
W. 8 Mi., Detroit, 3% blocks West of
Livernois. Z

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

LINES
2
3
4

ONE-DAY
.70
.85
1.00

SPECIAL
SIX-DAY
RATE
3.48
4.20
4.95

1962 LAMBRETTA-$250
HU 3-4667
Z20

i

Regents Approve-Leaves
For Faculty Members

sire to
tion.

speed up their own educa-

U

The Regents granted the follow-
ing leaves and off-campus assign-
ments at their regular meeting
last Friday:
Leave extension for Prof. John
C. Kohl of the engineering college,
to continue his assignment on the
staff of the urban transportation
program of the United States
Housing and Home Finance Agen-
cy.
Awaits Visa
Extension of leave for Prof.
Chung Nim Lee of the mathemat-
ics department for the University
year 1963-64, to await his quota for
a permanent visa.
Leave for Thomas Stephens
Lough, research associate in the
Institute of Science and Technol-
ogy, to continue his work as a
project director with the Interna-
tional Bureau of the United States

COED
BOWLING

Grinnell's
323 South Maie
Open Monday & Friday Evenings
Until 9:00

Michigan Union Alleys
Open 7 days 1-11 p.m.
Automatic Pinsetters

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SBSCRIBE NOW
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MAIL THIS FORM in Today or call NO 2-3241
Dlvr6mongwekoOny75 ($5bym------------------
Delivered 6 mornings week for Only $7.50 ($8.50 by mail )

Semester rate... .. $4.00

($5.00 by mail)

Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency.
Leave for Prof. James C. T. Mao
of the School of Business Admin-
istration, to undertake a research
project at the University of Cali-
fornia at Berkeley.
Sick leave for Prof. Mary Lou
Marshall of the department of
pathology, from July 1-Oct. 31,
1963.
Fulbright Grant
Leave for Prof. Arch W. Nay-
lor, of the engineering college, for
the University year 1963-64, to
follow a Fulbright grant for study
at the Technical University of
Delft in the Netherlands.
Sick leave for Margery M.
Owen, bureau of government li-
brarian, from June 6-July 1 and
July 29 through Aug. 16, 1963.
Sick leave for Prof. Chai Yeh,
of the engineering college, from
July 22-Aug. 26, 1963.
Off-Campus
Assignments
Associate Dean of the School of
Dentistry Robert Edward Doerr,
from Nov. 15-Dec. 15, 1963, to
visit dental schools in Mexico, Do-
minical Republic, Haiti, Puerto
Rico and Cuba.
Helen B. Fritz, assistant re-
search sociologist of the Mental
Health Research Institute, from
Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1963, to complete
her portion of the monograph on
schizophrenia now under way un-
der the research grant from the
United States Public Health Serv-
ice.
Prof. John Higham of the his-
tory department, second semester,
1963-64, to undertake a study of
the moral and cultural change in
America from 1850 to 1870 under
a Rockefeller Foundation grant.
Study Education
Woodrow W. Hunter, research
associate of the division of geron-
tology, Institute for Human Ad-
justment and in the Institute of
Labor and Industrial Relations,;
Sept. 3-Oct. 18, 1963, to study pre-
retirement\ education programs
and assess attitudes in several
Western European countries to-
ward retirement of older workers.
Eira I. Mattsson, associate re-
search psychologist of the Mental
Health Research Institute, Sept. 1,
1963-Feb. 28. 1964, to complete her
part of the monograph on schizo-
phrenia supported by the United;
States Public Health Service.
Robert H. Muller, associate di-
rector of the University Library,
from Oct. 7-Nov. 2, 1963, to visit
research libraries in West Ger-
many.
Prof. A. Geoffrey Norman, of
the botany department and direc-
tor of the Botanical Gardens, Sept.
1, 1963-June 30, 1964, to serve as
a special advisor to the president
of the National Academy of Sci-
ences.

FOR SALE-1962 Honda 305 Super Hawk.
Call 2-0050. Reasonable. ZiI
FOR SALE-Bella Motor Scooter, like
new. One of the finest made. Must
see to appreciate. 665-3291. Z12
FOR SALE-1960 Horex cycle. 100 c.c.
Excellent condition, $250. 3-4085 after
5:30. Z17
HONDA OF ANN ARBOR
1906 Packard Road
665-9281 Z3
CYCLES & SCOOTERS-BMW-r50-'59,
all white, extras. Harley tricycle, great
for campus and winter; carries 4,
giant luggage compartment. Vespas,
Cushmans and Lambrettas. NO 3-1714.
USED CARS
'59 FORD for $500. 665-0971. N41
FOR SALE-1962 Ducato. Pretty poor
shape. Make a ridiculous offer. N36
1961 VOLVO, Model 544. Will sacrifice.
Call Milan, HE 2-1456. N42
'57 FORD V-8 auto. Good transportation
Only $275. Call Phyllis, 663-6823 before
noon or 665-4927 after 4. N39
1963 BUICK LE SABLE-4-door hard-
top, power brakes and steering, many
extras. Excellent condition, low mile-
age, private owner. HU 2-0405. N37
1962 AUSTIN-HEALY '3000-Blue, full
equipmen, $2495. 1962 MG-A MK. II
roadster, radio, luggage rack, nice,
$1895. 1961 Austin-Healey Sprite,
sharp, hardtop, red, radio; $1425.
Overseas Imported Cars Inc.
331 S. 4th. 662-2541
FOR RENT
ROOMMATE FOR 2-MAN APT.-Furn.
On lake 6 mi. from AA on Expressway.
Double garage. Fireplace. Dock and
private beach. $42.50 month each.
Phone NO 3-7281 between 5:30 p.m.
and 7:30 p.m. C4
APARTMENT FOR SUBLEASE-$45/mo.
Good location, 535 Packard, NO 2-
8186. Move in today. C2
MAN WANTED to share furn'd. house.
$40/mo., utilities incld. car necessary.
662-3865, 5-7 p.m. C47
ROOM FOR RENT-Clean, pleasant;
garage included. Male student pre-
ferred. 223 Buena Vista. NO 2-7692.
C0
LOOKING FOR GIRL ROOMMATE for
newspacious apartment near cam-
pus. Excellent facilities. Phone NO
5-2167 after 6 p.m. if interested. C1
PARKING PLACE
Block from Law Quad. $4.50 per ma
NO 3-7268. 45
GARAGE FOR RENT-Also open park-
ing vicinity Geddes, Wilmot and For-
est intersection. Also next to Harris
Hall. NO 2-7787. C48
GRAD STUDENT (I or 2), to share new
modern apt. 3 blocks from campus.
453-3287. C12
BEL-AIR APTS.-i ana 2 nedrooms. All
new, Danish modern furniture. Air-
conditioning, balconies, wall to wall
carpeting. Campus location. 2-5780.
Eves. 2-5140. C24
WANTED-Male graduate student to
live, rent free, near campus in com-
fortable home of able-bodied elderly
widower. Ample facilities for privacy
fast. Osias Zwerdling. Call 3-5107. C3
and study. Room, bath, and break-
MISCELLANEOUS
FREE KITTENS. Call 3-1511, Ext. 2573
or 3-6345. M2
STOCK UP with lots of good food
for your Weekend Party at
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard
Open every night 'til 12

HELP WANTED
BABYSITTERS WANTED - Flexible
week-day hours. Apply at 324 E. Jef-
ferson, Apt. 4, weekends or after 6.
H38
MAN WANTED
2 dishwashers to work in exchange for
3 meals. Call 662-0994. H33
GIRL FOR PART-TIME WORK-Sat.
noon 'til Sunday evening. 665-0547.
BABYSITTER WANTED-Mon., Tues.,
Wed., at 2 p.m. $10 per wk. 665-0955.
H140
MAN OR WOMAN to cook dinners Tues-
day, Thursday, and Friday evenings.
B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation, 1429
Hill Street. Phone 663-4129. H36
PART-TIME MAN for service station
who will be here for next 2 yrs. Exp.
preferred but not necessary., Leave
name, address and phone at Box 4,
Mich. Daily, H39
WANTED-Part-time sales. Students to
sell blankets and stadium robes in
your school colors. For more informa-
tion write to: Franklin Textile Corp.,
312 Fifth Ave., New York 1, New York.
Attn. Mr. M. Elbaum. H37
ALLOWANCE PROBLEMS? Beat them
by selling Custom-Imprinted Sweat-
shirts in Just a portion of your spare
time. Big profits on every sale. Every
organization and group on campus is
your prospect. Details from Elin Mfg.
Co., Dept. C-21, Rochester, Indiana.
Men and women wanted. H35
TRANSPORTATION
WANT RIDE Tuesday and Thursday
from Ypsi to campus to arrive by 9
a.m., to leave at 6 p.m. Will share
expenses. Call 483-4452. 01
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-Vicinity of Angell Hall-Wrist-
watch, Elgin, gold, with inscription
1947. Call NO 3-1152, H. Sweeney. A15
LOST-Keys in vicinity of Frieze or S.
State. Call 3-1561, Ext. 1275. A14
LOST-In vic. of S. U. and Church St.-
Red clutch purse and brown note-
book. Finder please phone Karen,
665-9761, Ext. 39. Reward. A13
PERSONAL
HOW ABOUT A DATE THIS WEEK-
END? PICK ME UP AT TWELVE ...
P19
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, PEGGY!
V. Edward Canale F18"
DIG the MET-TET. F9
COALESCENCE of the arts needs female
patroness. 8-6807. F8
WANTED!! Neat name for huge, cud-
dly, boy-type teddy bear. URGENT.
Call Kay-5-9761, Ext. 58. F23
GET YOUR "Activities Booklet" NOW-
Student Offices-Michigan Union. F1
GERMAN MEAT PATTY on rye served
at ROMANOFF'S, at Bell Tower. F26
WANTED-Girl to share apt. Call 665-
9339. F44
M.K.-YES, who is truly wise? He who
knoweth much, but saith little. Vide
Song of Songs, VII: 6-9 nearly old
man. P24
ROAD RUNNERS-For the best in rock
'n' roll, popular music, Call Mike,
663-9591. F49
BLOCK FROM CAMPUS-Large furn-
ished 1 bedroom apt. $75 per month,
includes all utilities. NO 3-7268. F26
$1.25
Haircut, Mon. thru Thurs., 347 May-
nard near Arcade. $1.50 Fri. and Sat.
AUSTIN DIAMOND CORPORATION -
"Where marginal prices buy quality
diamonds!" 1209 S. University. 663-
7151. P73

SEE OUR COSMETICIAN FOR
SIMPLE.SKIN PROBLEMS

VILLAGE APOTHECARY
1114 S. University '

PERSONAL
TO JEFF AND DAVE COULOMB!
Sapo F25
RIDE WANTED-Desire ride to Chicago
for weekend of Sept. 27. Willing to'
share expenses. Call 5-7845, , P42
immortal one
PEGGY COHEN
The Daily wishes you a
Happy Birthday 2
F22
DIAMONDS-Highest quality at com-
petitive prices. Call C. K. Reaver Co.
of Ann Arbor, 300 S. Thayer. NO
2-1132. F18
SAVE OVER 60c on nationally adver-
tised Mayo-Spruce U of M sweat-
shirts(navy, sizes SMLXL). Hurry
to 421 or 219 Chicago House, West
Quad. F37
RJFCNSWEATHERC
WCBN 650ke
P21
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE PHI PSI
FEARSOME FOURSOME-They're real,
swingers! P50
MUSIC STUDENTS-Feel out of tune?
Feel really viol? Treble your pleas-
ure: horn in on the Conference on'
the University. Drum up some re-
forms. Make a concerted effort to
procure petition: at SGC office. No
strings attached. F20

P40 1

NAME
" - - -- --s----.----.-.-.-.-..-----... ..-----------
ADDRESS
- - -- -------------- -------------------
CITY
-------------------------------------.-_-,-__..._- -

Figure 5 average words to aline
Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri.
Phone NO 2-4786

FOR SALE
FOR ALE-Low priced used m
Call 2-0626.after 7 p.m.
NEW ELECTRIC STOVE and dish
$60 each. Call NO 5-5839.
FOR SALE-Component Hi-FI se
Jim, 663-5566.
USED FURNITURE-Chairs, ches
refrig., etc. NO 2-1443.
FOR SALE-Microscope "Zeiss"
cular- inocular, excellent cOa
542-6431, Detroit.
L. 0. SMITH Typewriter-13" sup
vial, Elite type. Perfect coned
May be seen at 420 Maynard.
Miss Hilton. 662-3241.
HOUSE-Three bedrooms, $14,000,
to suit. Lakewood, 115 Highlak
gas heat, full basement, fenced
yard, wooded lot, near elen
school, lake, shopping center, bi
Almn.'storm screens - screen
tool shed. NO 5-5839.
DESK LAMP, pole lamp, stationa
inet, letter file tray, file baske
metal card files (2 drawer),.
and brass book ends. Call
Wrentmore, days 5-9114 for a
ment eves NO 3-9493; If not av
leave name and number.
BUSINESS SERVICES
IRONING in my apt. Reasonal
block from Markley Hall. Ca:
6405.
HARPSICHORD instruction by g
of Yale School of Music. Instr
available for practice. 8-8309.
ANY MOTH HOLES, tears, or b
your clothes? Wel reweave the
new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP, 224
FOR THE FINEST in personalize
tionery, call Bob Epstein, 66
NEED CASH?
You can convert your surplus C
into cash. Michigan's most dist
resale shop. THE TREE, 418 I
NO 3-2008.
VOCAL INSTRUCTION
Singing and Speaking
CAROL F. WESTERMAN
Member of the National Associ
of Teachers of Singing
715 Granger
NO 8-6584
LET US TYPE and reproduce
term papers and dissertations
for reproduction). Photo copy,
ings. Gretzingers Business e
320 S. Huron, HU 2-0191
DEVANEY PIANO SCHOOL-Instz
by a leading professional pianis
vard alumnus, former pupil a
zorg, Webster, Sandor; veteran
tionwide engagements with .
Martin's orchestra, including
to-coast radio and recordinge
ence erstwhile orchestra lead
concert soloist at the Palm
Biltmore; and currently in
year as musical director for At
bor's Rubaiyat, broadcasting
WOIA. 308 Catherine, Ann Arbc
3735. Scholarships Available.
BARGAIN CORNER
SAM'S STORE
Has Genuine LEVI's Gakt
"WHITE LEVI'S"
SLIM-FITS
4.49
FOR "GUYS AND DOLL
Black, brown, loden,
"white, cactus, light b
SAM'S SigORE
122 E. Washington

AM I YOUR CUP OF TEA? Young
visiting professor, newcomer to AA
scene, wishes unscientific introduction
to emotionally mature young, woman.
Widely traveled, ex-Villager (vintage
1955), friend of Kulchur, the Folk-
lore Center, Beaujolais, languages,
outdoor sports. Bored by cocktail
parties, pomp, sports cars, space
travel, TV, and "dating." I'll reply
to all letters. Write Box 3, Michigan
}Daily. P11
ATTENTION STUDENTS
Furniture, bookcases, books, chests,;
desks; Appliances; Antiques; Musical
instruments. Bought, sold. DARWINS,
2930 S. State. NO 8-7744. F11
Meet The Right People
The purpose of our organization, using
established techniques of personality
appraisal and an IBM system, is to
introduce unmarried persons to others
whose background and ideals are
congenial with their own. Interviews
by appointment. Phone after 9 a.m.
NO 2-4867.
MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC
INTRODUCTION SERVICE'
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7 varieties of lettuce
green dill
cucumbers
parsley
tomatoes
o dress up that dinner-
cauliflower
broccoli
green beans
waxed beans
spinach
brussel
sprouts
cabba
Recipes on request
Open Wednesdays & Saturd

are to be

315 Detroit St.
Stall No. 91
Roger Butcher, Prop..

ArM L S 22W M-9N V' R' , ' M -S RI -- Uw IMP 81b 0 %F £U --w~A~Uil

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