THE MICHIGAN DAILY A'ELCOME STUDENTS We have six expert barbers in our air-conditioned shop to keep your hair neat and we!I-groomed. U. of M. BARBERS 715 North University SPECIAL PROGRAMS: IC Welcomes New Foreign Students By BEATRICE TEODORO About 100 entering foreign stu- dents are expected by the Inter- national Center staff, said Robert B. Klinger, IC Program Director. Studeits from abroad are ad- mitted if they fulfill the academic requirements, prove financial re- sponsibility, and have a command of the English language. However freshmen are not admitted. Upon arriving at the University, foreign students are referred to the IC. There they can obtain in- formation about housing, orienta- tion, counseling, and registration. Each student is assigned a Y {. STEAKS and CHOPS' our.specialty For Delicious LUNCHES and SHORT-ORDERSJ at REASONABLE PRICES it's FowersCpffee Shop 2204 West Stadium Blvd. Phone NO 2-9442 counselor, who assists him on im- migration and naturalization re- quirements, employment regula- tions, laws of the home govern- ment such as currency- exchange and visas, finances and personal problems. He is also directed to an aca- demic adviser who will explain the departmental requirements and degree prerequisites, grading system.and other scholastic infor- mation. The Orientation Program in- cludes most of the activities that are presented for all new stu- dents, such as tours, coke dates and mixers. However some events are planned especially for inter. national students. Special Groups Special Orientation groups of International students are formed. The leaders are trained to show the students what will particular- ly interest them, keeping in mind that many of them are graduate students. .On Tuesday an International Mixer, open to foreign and Ameri- can students, was held at the Wo- man's Athletic Bldg. Today an important briefing session will be conducted by the IC staff. It will present certain academic and social definitions and customs that may be new to the students. Also tomorrow a formal recep- tion is planned at the Rackham 3. 0 IELVIS IN THE ARMY "Just another G.I." they said. But two dozen photographers recorded his first Army meal. Sevenity reporters covered his first Army haircut. 400 females mobbed the bus that took him to camp. 500 scream- ing teen-age girls met him at the dock in Germany. The Army's attempts to pass off Elvis Presley as "just an average private" is one of the most outrageously funny, true stories of our genera- tion. Read all about "Elvis Presley in The Army." In the February issue of Re dook The Magazine for Young Adults Now on sale at all newsstands Amphitheater and Assembly Hall, 'to welcome the entering foreign students. Introduce Students During the orientation period, the students are also introduced to the many programs sponsored by the IC and other international and religious groups. There is the Wives Program, under the direction of Mrs. K. Meade of theIC. Often the wives of students are not studying, and find themselves alone and idle in strange surroundings. The pro- gram helps them adjust to the new social situation and helps them meet other wives and home- makers. The Ann Arbor-Washtenaw Council of Churches, in coopera- tion with Catholic and Jewish groups and the Protestant Foun- dation for International Students sponsor a Host Family Program. Each new student who wishes to meet an American family is as- signed to one who will "host"him for a year. This can include visits, dinners, and other cultural exchanges, de- pending upon the interests and time of both parties. State Creates Legal Institute For Education The University of Michigan Law School, the Wayne State Univer- sity Law School, and the State Bar of Michigan reported the for- mation of an Institute on Con- tinuing Legal Education to the University Regents on Friday, Jan. 22. The institute is designed to op- erate on a self-?sustaining basis. It will greatly expand the activi- ties of the two state universities in continuing legal education, University Vice - President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Nie- huss told the Regents, Prof. Charles W. Joiner of the University Law School is the head of the Institute's executive com- mittee. Conferences and short courses conducted byT the Institute will be arranged in' cooperation with the University Extension Service and the Division of Adult Education. Formation of the Institute came at the request of the State Bar Association. Mathematics Professor Love Dies Prof. Emeritus Clyde E. Love of the mathematics department, widely noted author of books*-on mathematics and bridge, died Sunday at his home in Ann Ar- bor at age77. Prof. Love published three math textbooks, "Analytic Geometry," "Elements of Analytic Geometry" and "Differential and Integral Calculus," which have run to- 13 editions. Most of all, Prof. Love was an outstanding teacher who was re- vered by many students. His abil- ity as an expositor explains the great success of his mathematics texts which for some years led in worldwide sales. After retirement his continued activity was shown by the publi- cation of two bridge books, "Squeeze Plays in Bridge" and "Bridge Squeezes Complete." The latter, which appeared only a few months before his death, has re- ceived glowing notices in bridge publications and reviews. 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