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March 01, 1960 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-03-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


TUESDAY, MARCH 1,1960

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE Mr

Name Peter New Director
Of Behavior Study Group

By NAN MARKEL
Hollis W. Peter will take over
as head of the Foundation for
Research on Human Behavior, it
was reported yesterday.
Peter has worked since 1954 as
assistant director of the na-
tion, a non-profit organization

findings to people in operating or-
ganizations who can use them,"
Prof. Hayes has explained. Little
research is done by the Founda-
tion itself.
Along with Prof. Hayes, Peter
has had much experience work-
ing with the Point Four program
which gives technical and finan-
cial aid for underdeveloped coun-
tries.
Surveying people from the
Philippines in 1958 who had re-
ceived technical training in the
United States under the Interna-
tional Cooperation Administra-
tion, Peter and his colleagues iso-
lated factors determining success
or failure of the program.
He directed the study, which
piloted country-by-country evalu-
ation of ICA.
It was found that "participants,
their supervisors, and United
States Technical Assistants all ex-
press a high level of satisfaction
with the United States training.
It is evident that those responsi-
ble for planning and operating
this major part of the entire
training experience are doing a
good job."
But certain changes were sug-
gested as a result of the survey.
Among these were:
1) Examination of the length
of the trining program, which
most felt was too short.
2) Realization that academic
training and academic degrees are
most highly prized in the Philip-
pines.
3) An attempt to keep partici-
pants from excessive expectations,
"as failure to realize these expec-
tations contributes to dissatisfac-
tion and lower utilization."

HOLIS W. PETER
.. to head Foundation
which is housed in a University
building but financed by grants
from industry.
He will replace the present di-
rector, Prof. Samuel Hayes of the
economics department, who has
been appointed to head UNESCO's
social science department for two
years.
The Foundation primarily sup-
ports research on problems of
concern to management.
"We make sure good research
is done" and "transmit research

IN AUSTRIA-
Ask Help
For A lien
Students
From 'Student Mirror'
AUSTRIA - In a memorandum
on the situation of foreign stu-]
dents in Austria, the Federation of
the Austrian Catholic Student Or-i
ganizations (OCV) has demanded
measures toward solution of the
problems which become more and
more serious as the stream from
abroad to Austria's institutions of
higher learning increases with
each new year.
The first measure would have to
be the expansion of the institu-
tions (above all the institutes for
ntural sciences and the labora-
tories), the construction of stu-
dent hostels and cafeterias and the
expansion of libraries.
Secondly, agreements on the
part of the state should be made
in regard to the selection of for-
eign students in their home-
cdintry on the basis of ability.
The task of the universities
would be above all to acquaint the
foreign students with Austria's
cultural -' ritage and tradition.
In order to secure frictionless
adjustment to classwork for them,
the introduction and intensifica-
tion of German language courses
and also rigorous standards in the
language tability tests and in the
recognition of high school certifi-
cates must be demanded.
The religiously directed student
organizations are entrusted with
the special task of providing the
foreign students the necessary
spiritual and philosophical support
in opposition to the very active
Communist propaganda.
CANADA - The Students Fed-
eration of the University of Ot-
tawa has refused to withdraw the
draft for a constitution which it
had submitted to the university
authorities. The constitutional
draft had been altered by the uni-
versity authorities without having
notified the students. For ten
years now the students have been
submitting constitutional drafts to
the authorities, but they have al-
ways been turned down or given
back to the student council so late
that they could not be ratified. By
refusing to withdraw the draft, the
members of the student council
want to force the university au-
thorities to take a stand on this
issue.
CHINA (Taiwan) - Less than
eight per cent of the 4,681 Chinese
students who went to study abroad
in the past nine years have re-
turned to Taiwan, according to the
Nationalist Chinese Ministry of
Education.

DAILY
OFFICIAL

(Continued from Page 4)
Mich.; Freeport, Texas; Lee Hall, Va.:
Pittsburgh, Calif.; Baton Rouge, La.;
James River Div., Williamsburg, Va.
All degrees: ChE and Met. BS-MS: ME.
BS: EE. Also all degrees: all phases of
Cheimstry and Physics. Feb., June and
Aug. grads. Summer employment:
please check Placement Office the day
before you plan to interview. Citizen-
ship required.
March 3:
General Dynamics Corp., Electric
Boat Div., Groton, Conn. All degrees:
EE, ME, Met., N.A. and Marine, Physics
and Math, E. Physics. MS-PhD: AE,
ChE, EM, Org and Phys. Chemistry and
Biochemistry. MS: CE and Instru.-
Electrical. June and Aug. grads. Sum-
mer employment: Write directly to Mr.
H. H. Gatch, Jr., Engr. Coordinator.
Citizenship required.
Airborne Instruments Lab., Deer
Park, L.I., N.Y. Al idegrees: E. Physics
and Communications Engrg. Must rank
high in the class scholastically and be
leaders in extracurricular activities.
June grads.
Battelle Memorial Institute, Colum-
bus, Ohio. All degrees: AE ChE, EE,
IE, ME. Res. and Dev. and Met. BS:
E Math, EM, E Physics. MS-PhD: Nu-
clear. June and Aug. grads. Separate
recruiting program for summer em-
ployment. U.S. citizenship required.
March 2 and 3:
General Electric Co., all locations.
(1) Mr. D. H. Rohrer, all locations.
BS-MS: AE, ChE, EE, IE and ME. MS:
Constru., Instru. June and Aug. grads.
Summer employment: Please check
Placement Office on March 1. Openings
mayebe filled by Jrs. Citizenship re-
quired.
(2) Mr. R. N. Mills, all locations in-
cluding Det., Holland and Edmore
plants. BS-MS: AE, EE, EM, ME. BS:
E Math., E Physics and Set. MS: In-
stru. June and Aug. grads. Summer em-
ployment: Please check Placement Of-
fice on March 1. Openings may be filled
by Jrs. Both men and women.
March 3 and 4:
The Atlantic Refining Co., Crude Oil
Production and Research and Dev.,
Southwest. All degrees: ME, EE and
ChE. June and Aug. grads. Summer em-
ployment: Outstanding students, top
half of class, Jrs. preferably majoring
in fields listed above. Men only.
Interviews:
The following companies will inter-
view at the Bureau of Appointments.
4001 Admin. Bldg. Call Ext. 3371 for an
interview appointment.
Thurs., March 3:
International Business M a e i n e s;
Corp. (IBM) Dearborn, Mich. Location
of work: Branch Offices --Midwest,
Research oenters and p ro du ct io n
plants. Will refer applications to other
parts of the U.S. Graduates: June, Aug-
ust. 1) Men with a degree in Liberal
Arts or Business Administration for
Marketing Training Program. This is
the training program for executives in
all the non-technical divisions of the
corporation. 2) Men and women with
BS or MS in Inorganic Chemistry, MS
in Organic Chemistry, BS or MS in
Physics, MS in Geology, or BS or MS
in Mathematics for Applied Science.
A new and challenging profession for
physical science majors consulting on
research and engineering problems and
their solution through the use of elec-
tronic computers. 3) Women with a
degree in Liberal Arts or Business Ad-
ministration for System Service Repre-
sentative. Representative assists IBM
sales representatives and customers at
the time IBM equipment is being in-
stalled in a customer's office. She does
the preliminary analysis and research
for adapting the versatile equipment to
particular customer needs. After instal-
lation she gives trial tests, demonstra-

BULLETIN

11

tions, and sets up machines for speci-
fic jobs.
Procter & Gamble, Buying and Traf-
fic Dept., Cincinnati, Ohio. Location of
work: Cincinnati, Ohio. Graduates:
June, Aug. Nature of business: Manu-
facture and marketing of soaps, syn-
thetic detergents, edible fats and oils
for, household and industrial users,
prepared mixes, health and beauty
aids, and paper products. 1) Men with
a degree in Liberal Arts or Business Ad-
ministration for Industrial Purchas-
ing Training Program. The trainee is
given on-the-job training with imme-
diate responsibiliteis spending four
months in office division, two weeks in
the Cincinnati plants and one year of
preliminary buying experience under
the guidance of a senior buyer or
supervisor. 2) Men with a degree in
Liberal Arts or Business Administra-
tion for Industrial Traffic training pro-
gram. The trainee spends one week
learning the structure of the depart-
ment and then three or four months
in the major sections of the depart-
ment learning all procedures thor-
oughly after which time he will spend
three weeks in the Cincinnati plants
observing plant operations. After ap-
proximately a year and a half of train-
ing, a man is qualified to assume real
responsibility in the dept.
Fri., March 4:
American National Bank and Trust
Co. of Chicago, Ill. Men with a degree
in Liberal Arts or Business Adminis-
tration for Banking Training Program.
The program combines on-the-job
training with planned job rotation for
eventual placement in responsible po-
sitions in commercial loaning, invest-
ments, trust administration, banking
assistants, division and department
supervisors, field service representa-
tives. Training is designed to meet the
needs of a diversified business: com-
pany wide orientation, special training
in the area of assignment leading to
supervisory and management responsi-
bilities, additional company sponsored
training and education (including edu-
cational refund plan) and a program
of transfer and reassignment as the
means of broad career development
2) Men with a degree in Mathematics,
Law, or Medicine for technical and
professional program. Positions avail-
able as Actuaries, Security Analysts,
Lawyers and Doctors. Training is as
stated in No. 1 3) Men with a degree
in Liberal Arts or Business Adminis-
tration for Sales-Group Insurance and
Pension Plans and Service Representa-
tive, Life Insurance Agents,, Broker-
age Assts. and Sales Managers. Train-
ing Program as stated in No. 1.
Fri., Feb. 26:
Central Intelligence Agency - See
Wednesday's listings.
Student Part-Time
Employment
'the following part-time jobs are
available to students. Applications for
these jobs can be made in the Non-
Academic Personnel Office, Rm. 1020
Admin. Bldg.. during the following
hours: Mon. through Fri., 1:30 p.m. to
4:45 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring students
for part-time work should contact Jim
Stempson, Student Interviewer at NO,
3-1511, Ext. 2939.AL
MALE
6 Waiters (hours flexible).
2 Meal jobs (in fraternities.)
2 Rooms in exchange for yard and
housework.
1 Housefather, Grad. student preferred.
Psych., Soc. or Ed. major. (6 nights
per week, 8-9 p.m. 35 min. drive
from Ann Arbor.)
2 Readers (Mon., Wed., Fri., 10 a.m. to
12 noon, Tues. and Thurs., 1 p.m. to
4 p.m.

.
,.
=1

TOMORROW NIGHT at 8
THE B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION
1429 Hill Street
presents
MICHAEL M. LUTHER
Department of History
as the 3rd and final lecturer in its Forum on
"JEWISH-GENTILE RELATIONS: TRENDS IN
GERMANY, UNITED STATES, U.S.S.R."
Subject: "Trends in U.S.S.R."
EVERYBODY IS WELCOME

ROOM AND BOARD
ROOM AND/OR BOARD for men stu-
dents. Meals $16 per week with re-
bates. Room $7 per week. Linen fur-
nished. 1319 Hill, corner of Forest.
Call manager, NO 2-6422. E9
FOR RENT
CAMPUS ATTRACTIVELY furnished
single, with private bath, $40. Also
basement room, $25. 614 Monroe. NO
3-5224. C62
SUBLET above average 1 bedroom apt.
1st floor. Lovely brick apartment bldg.
Furnishings reasonable. NO 3-5010 af-
ter 5:30. C63
PARKING SPACE for rent near State
Theatre. Call NO 2-7274. C61
SINGLE ROOM for male, one block to
Mich. Union. 509 S. Division. C60
40% OFF-Have 1 space in triple apt.
and am bound by lease. New furni-
ture, 7 min. walk to campus. Can't
lose by calling NO 3-7761. C58
ROOM FOR RENT: On campus, 1346
Geddes just off Forest, newly decor-
ated double. $5.50 each, singles $6.
See Mr. Feinger in basement apt.
evenings or call NO 2-3982 anytime.
C57
ROOMS: Campus, Single & double
rooms. Clean, furnished. Call NO 3-
4706. C54
MONROE STREET furnished apt. for
rent. 1 room plus kitchen and bath.
$80. NO 2-5035 after 5 P.M. C31
ACTUALLY on campus, clean 5 rooms
furnished. NO 3-5947. C20
CAMPUS ROOMS for men, reasonable.
Linens furnished. NO 3-4747. C17
ONE BLOCK FROM CAMPUS-Modern
apartment, 514 S. Forest. Also room.
NO 2-1443. C25
LARGE ROOM, single 8 per week. HU
2-4959, 5643 Geddes Road. C35
APARTMENT for four, one block from
campus. Large, parking, fireplace,
basement storage. Cal NO 3-6039 af-
ter 5. )C61
FOR RENT: Quiet, pretty, furnished
apt. for 2, 1 bedroom, good heat, near
campus. NO 5-8516. C53
GIRL WANTED to share spacious apart-
ment close to campus next semester.
Call NO 5-7616 after 5 p.m. C67
DO YOU HAVE boarders moving out-
Rooms for rent? Apartments for rent?
Do you want a cheap, convenient,
widely read source toepublish this in-
formation??????????? then - try the
MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED
NO 2-4786
42
FURNISHED University operated apart-
ments available immediately at Uni-
versity Terrace and North Campus.
Available to married students and
married faculty. Efficiency, $85:One
bedroom, $97; Two bedroom $112. Call
NO 3-1511, ext. 3311, or apply 1056 Ad-
ministration Bldg. C40
PERSONAL
CAMPUS CLOSEUPS
Do You Know?
Albert Black ..................2-4401
Barb Gerch........... 5-7711
F100
WHEN YOU SEE something horrible
happening, your instinct is to do
something about it. You can freeze
in fearful apathy or you can even
talk yourself into saying that it isn't
horrible. I can't do that. I have to
act. This is too horrible, We know it.
Let's all act.-Albert Bigelow PIC
8-6234 PIC. F102
BE A PLOWSHARE BEATER - Attend
the Peacemaker's France (Anti-Mili-
tary Ball). March 4, 9 to 12 P.M. Mich-
igan Union 3 K-L-M-N. Informal.
F
JOIN THE FUN, COME TO THE MICH-
IGRAS MASS MEETING. Much op-
portunity to meet and work with
others on campus. Come one, come
all. Tues., March 8, at 7:30 in the
Union Ballroom. F101
PRIVATE SALE of my large library,
which I have been collecting for over
'65 years. Many books nearly 100 years
old and over; famous authors on many
subjects. Call at 617 Packard from 12
noon to 4 P.M. daily, except Sunday;
or phone W. W. Mann for appoint-
ment. F13
DISERTATIONS-Multilined, Low cost,
quick service. The Edwards Letter
Shop, 711 N. University. F8
FLY TO FLORIDA
Spring Vacation
$99 round trip. NO 3-6074
F
SORORITY RUSHEES: Get into the so-
rority of your choice. Guaranteed
method. Really for sure. Find it on

Pg. 18 of this Monday's GARGOYLE.
F95
STUDENT OPERA tickets are now in
at Grinnell's . . . 323 S. Main. F93
SGC CINEMA GUILD PETITIONS for
spring sponsorship of films now avail-
able at SAB building, SGC office.
Must be returned by 5:00 P.M.
March 1. F71
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
GRINNELL'S
Used Bran Bach grand piano like new
only $445
Come in, investigate Magnavox
March Clearance Sale
Bargains in Stereo and TV

LINES
2
3
4

ONE-DAY
.80
1.12

SPECIAL-
TEN-DAY
RATE
.39
.47
.54

Figure 5 average words to a line.
Call Classified between 1:00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri.
and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786

BARGAIN CORNER
ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks
39c; shorts 69c; military supplies.
Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W1
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
FOREIGN CAR SERVICE
We service all makes and models
of Foreign and Sports Cars.
Lubrication $1.0
Nye Motor Sales
514 E. Washington
Phone NO 3-4858
87
NEW ATLAS TIRES
"Gripsafe" in sets of 4; 4-670x15,
$58.75; 750x14, $74.95; (plus recap-
able tires and tax). Other sizes
comparably low. Tune-ups. Brake
service.
HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION
Cor. Main & Catherine NO 8-7717
84
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly service is our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and accessor-
ies. Warranted & guaranteed. See
us for the best price on new &
use dtires. Road service-mechanic
on duty.
"You expect more from Standard
and you get iti"
1220 8. University at Forest
NO 8-9168
WHITE'S AUTO SHOP
Bumping and Painting
2007 South State NO 2-3350
82
SMITH AUTO UPHOLSTERING
Auto and Furniture
Refinished - Reupholstered
Convertible Tops
NO 3-8644
YAHR'S MO'OR SALES
Bumping and Painting
Used Cars Bought and Sold
NO 3-4510
Both at 507 S. Ashley
89
Protect your car 3I1
* Fall Changeover
* Antifreeze
" Winter Lubrication
Complete Tune-up Service Available
GOLDEN'S
SERVICE STATION

BUSINESS SERVICES
TO THOSE of you who are always
wearing gym shoes on campus. Put
them to some good use. Run (don't
walk) right down to Ralph's for
that something extra in foods.
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard NO 2-3175
P82

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

RECORD SALE
This week only., Save up to 40%
on LP and Stereo records.
Music Center

300 S. Thayer

NO 2-2500
J30

Buy
EATON STATIONERY
MORRI IL'S

2
4
8
2
1

FEMALE
Readers (Mon., Wed., Fri., 10 a.m. to
12 noon, Tues. and Thurs., 1 p.m. to
4 p.m.
Typists (20 hrs, per week.)
Psych experiment subjects.
Typists (8 a.m. to 12 noon, Mon.-Fri.)
Answering Service (2 days per week
from 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 2 days from
2 p.m. to 11 p.m.

314 S. State

NO 3-248 1

r"-
1
I.

"Giving Morrill Support For Over 50 Years"

's :. .. nw.s.. ww .wi. s r x w ew .+e rw n.f r ar .ss.w ws.. .r .... .. ... r...rw rt

1
'I

r ,

A Camp us-to-Career Case HItIoLry
- I

601 Packard

II
AZV'18M ,

NO 8-9429
83

'7
9PO

NOT A SIGN OF A SLIP-UP!
Typing errors disappear like magic when you use Eaton's
Corrasable Bond. Never a trace of the word that was
erased; errors can be flicked off Corrsable's special surface
with an ordinary pencil eraser. Saves re-typing, time and
money. And the sparkling new whiteness gives all typing
a new brilliance. You can't make a mistake getting
Eaton's Corrisable. (Rhymes with erasable.)
Eaton's Corrsable Bond is
available in tight, medium, heavy
andoruons weight,. In >~
convenient 100-sheet packets
and 500-sheet ream boxes.
Berkshire Tyewriter Paper, _
backedVbythe famous
Eaton name.
Made only by Eaton
EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND
Typewriter Paper
EATON PAPER CORPORAtION *. PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSErTS
E.- 5

BUSINESS PERSONAL
BEFORE you buy a class ring, look at
the official Michigan ring. Burr Patter-
son and Auld Co., 1209 South Univer-
sity, NO 8-8887. FF99
FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC it's Johnny
Harberd - Bob Elliot - Boll Weevils -
Andy Anderson - Dick Tilkin - Al
Blaser - Kingsmen - Ray Louis -
Larry Kass plus many others. Phone
THE BUD-MOR AGENCY. NO 2-6362.
FF100
EUROPEAN TOURS, '60. 45 days, 9
countries including Oberammergau
Passion Play & Olympics, if desired.
All for $705. For details write West-
ropa, Box 2053, Ann Arbor. FF1
FOR SALE
TUXEDO "After Six," black and white
coat, 39 long. Call 103 Michigan West
Quad. B24
1956 4 DOOR English Ford. Perfect de-
luxe. Good condition. $465. NO 5-7374.
B25
2 STUDENTS nurse uniforms. Size 14-
good condition, Including cap. Call
NO 5-8495 after 6 P.M. B22
STUDENTS-I will give you a 25% dis-
count on a name brand portable type-
writer, backed by Ann Arbor's most
reputable office supply company. For
demonstration, call Ralph Frederick,
3-3839. 5-9 evenings. 844
WANTED TOBUY
WANTED-A '55 Michiganensian. Call
206 Cooley, E.Q. after 7 P.M. K7
MOTOR SCOOTER: Lambretta or Ves-
per. Call 405 Hayden House, East
Quad. K6
PHOTO SUPPLIES
CONTAFLEX II, F2.8, 45 mm. lens Com-
pur MXV shutter, Pre-set peratives,
W. A. Tele. Lens, Wantle Lens, Filters,
flash, and etc. Call OR 9-3702 toll free.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Men's horned rim glasses in
men's room Haven Hall. Call 3-8134.
A17
LOST: Brown silver-trimmed glasses.
Vicinity N U. between Drake's &
Alice Lloyd. Call 5505 Alice Lloyd.
A21
FOUND: Silver wedding band inscribed
M.S.H. to A.N.M. June 14th, 1959. Call
University Laundromat, NO 8-8412.
A20
FOUND: Money, Feb. 29, rightful own-

REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes
rewoven, Let us save your clothes,
Weave-Bac Shop. 224 Nickels Arcade.
NO 2-4647. J1
Reconditioned Vacuum Cleaners
$15.00 and up
J. LEABU SALES AND SERVICE
322 E. Liberty NO 3-3604
)J59
ONE-DAY SERVICE
AT SANFORDS...
Shoe Repairing
Hat Cleaning
Tailoring
Pressing
Shoe Shining
119 East Ann Street
Open 'Ti 8 P.M. -
Also Sundays & Holidays
(Opposite court house since 1927)
NO 8-6966
DO YOU HESITATE TO BUY SUB-
SCRIPTIONS TO YOUR FAVORITE
MAGAZINES BECAUSE YOU HATE
TO PAY "THAT KIND OF MONEY"?
IF SO, CAST YOUR EYE ON THE
PRICES QUOTED BELOW, AND
YOU'LL FIND THAT YOU NEED
HESITATE NO LONGER.
Nat'l You
Retail Pay
Magazine Price Only
American Heritage ....$15.00 $12.50
American Mercury...... 4.00 3.00
Argosy.................4.00 3.00
Audio...................4.00 3.00
Better Homes & Gar., .. 3.00 2.70
Camera 35.............. 2.50 1.75
Catholic Digest......... 4.00 3.20
Christian Herald....... 4.00 3.00
Downbeat.............. 7.00 5.60
Ebony................. 3.50 2.75
Electronics Illus. ...... 4.00 3.00
Field & Stream ........ 3.50 2.75
Flying (U.S.)........... 5.00 4.0
Forbes.................7.50 5.75
Glamour (Charm incI.) 4.00 3.00
Harper's Magazine .. ., 6.00 4.50
Hi Fi Stereo Review .. 4.00 3.00
High Fidelity........., 6.00 4.50
Horizons................18.00 15.30
House & Garden ...... 5.00 4.00
Look................. 4.00 3.00
Popular Electronics .... 4.00 3.00
Reporter................ 6.00 4.50
Rudder. .........4.00 3.00
Sports Car Guide ...... 5.00 3.75
Sports Car Illus......... 5.00 4.00
True (U.S.) .......... 4.00 3.00
U.S. Camera ........... 3.50 2.50
Venture................ 7.00 4.90
Vogue Pattern Bk...... 3.00 2.25
(All prices shown are for 1 year sub-
scriptions; we have even better dis-
counts for longer periods.)
(The magazines listed above are only
random examples of the more than
2,900 periodicals that we handle.)
CALL STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY,
NO 2-3061 before 5:00 P.M.; NO 3-3018
after. Place your order now; we will
be glad to bill you. J14
MISCELLANEOUS
SAVE on meals at Student Co-op. In-
quire at NO 8-6881. M
USED CARS
'58 AUSTIN HEALY 106mm two top
Sebering Cam, rth. $2,495. Call NO
3-7541 ext. 414. NO
HELP WANTED
NURSES, registered for Saline Com-
munity Hospital. All shifts, part time
or full time. Apply in person week-
days between 10:00 A.M. and 2:30
P.M., 400 West Russell St., SlIne,
Mich. H23
KITCHEN supervisor and cook wanted
for 8 weeks residence summer camp.
Must plan menus. If interested, write
giving experience, references and sal-
ary required. Write Camp, 1231 Van
Dusen Drive, A.A. B21
SUMMER CAMP Counselors Wanted.
Men for northern 8 week boys sum-
mer camp. Waterfront, archery, rifl-
ery, craft counselors needed. If In.
terested call NO 2-9454 after C. P.M.
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: Ride to Boulder, Colorado
for spring vacation. NO 2-4591, Jack
Stewart, 228 Hayden, E.Q. . G2
NEW CARS

Ken Murphy meets with Revenue 'Accounting people to discuss a new statistical formula. This
will be used to proportion the billing time spent on interstate and intrastate Long Distance calls.
He's making math and telephones
add up to a fine business career

323 S. Main

NO 2-5667
X36

During his senior year in college, math
major Kendall T. Murphy had job inter-
views with several firms, but none of
them appealed to him. "I wasn't inter-
ested in doing pure mathematics," he
says. "I wanted to apply math and statis-
tics to everyday business problems and
have management responsibilities, too."
At a professor's suggestion, Ken talked
with a Bell System representative and
was "surprised to learn how many practi-
cal applications statistics had in tele-
nhone comnanv onerations." The thor-

fornia, in June, 1956. Two years of ro-
tational training familiarized him with
company equipment, services and com- S
mercial procedures. Then he was as- E
signed to the Chief Statistician's Office
in San Francisco.
Today, as a Staff Statistician, Ken is
applying his math background to a vari-
ety of statistical studies dealing with:
rates and revenue, inventory and obso-
lescence of equipment, customer opinion,
personnel administration, quality control ,
and auditin.

Complete line of
HI Fl EQUIPMENT
at catalog prices.
HI FI
STUDIO
1319 So. Univ. Ave.

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FIAT
HAS EVERYTHING
HAS PRICE-Starts at $1098.00
p.o.e.
H.ASZ ECNOMY--UV I, to 5

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