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March 12, 1960 - Image 5

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-03-12

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SAY, MARCH 12, 1960

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

AY, MARCH 12, 1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Make Recording

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

cli

(Continued from Page 4)

--Daily--Jim Gallo
RECORDING-Members of the cast of Junior Girls Play, "What
Can You Lose?" recorded the original music of the play on
Thursday. First performance is set for next Thursday through
Saturday; tickets are available at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
box office.
FO R
SPARKLINKG RESULTS . ..
Stadiua Automatic Car Wash
142 East Hoover

Harold Duerkson and accompanied by
Rosemary Coman, will present works
by Howard Hanson and William Schu-
man. Compositions by Randall Thomp-
son, Persichetti, Kennan, Paul Cooper,
Menotti, Gordon Jacob and Schuman
will be performed, and the recital will
be open to the general public.
Lectures
A Series of three Introductory Com-
puter Lectures will be given on Tues.,
March 15 and 22 and April 12 from 7:30
to 9:30 p.m. in the west lecture room,
West Physics. Dr. Elliott I. Organick
of the Ford Foundation computer proj-
ect will give an introduction to pro-
gramming in the MAD language and
examples. A simple home problem will
be given at the end of the second lec-
ture. Students who turn in solutions
will have their problems run on the
IBMd704 computer and solutions will
be discussed at the third lecture on
April 12. MAD lecture notes will be
supplied.
Dr. Herbert E. Stokinger, Chief, Toxi-
cologic Services, Cincinnati, will speak
on "Community Air Pollution," on
Mon., March 14 at 4 p.m. in the School
of Public Health Aud.,
Placement Notices
Personnel Requests:
American Greetings Corp., Cleveland.
Ohio, has openings for six additional
engrs. as soon as possible. Interested
in acquiring one Mechanical Engr. in-
terested in the field of machine de-
sign, as well as Mech. Engrs. or In-
dustrial Engrs. interested in the field
of general engrg. or mfg. engrg. Call
the Bureau for further information.
Communicable Disease Center, Sa-
vannah, Ga., is presently recruiting to
1111 two Chemist positions in their
Technical Development Labs. PhD min-
imum or demonstrated ability to per-.
form comparable independent research.
Bartlesville Petroleum Research Cen-
ter, Bureau of Mines. Bartlesville, Ok-
lahoma., has a current vacancy for a
Physical Chemist. 'Recent grads and
June grads, will be considered.
U.S. Naval Radiological Defense Lab.,
San Francisco, has vacancies in the
following departments: Nucleonics
Div., Military Evaluations Div., Chemi-
cal Technology Div., Engrg. Div., Shops
Branch, and for the staff of the Scien-
tific Director. Call the Bureau for de-
tails.
Ben Z. Rubin Co., Detroit, is interest-
ed in employing a Sales Engr. to sell
nuclear instruments for them in
northern Ohio and southern Michigan.
Training in physics and electronics is
required. Experience in application of
nuclear instruments, industrial instru-
ments or sales is desirable but not
necessary. Also in need of a full-time
secretary.
New York Central System, N.Y.C., Is
seeking 32 graduate Industrial Engr.,
13 of whom are for their expanding
Industrial Engrg. Dept., and will be
given on-the-job guided experience on
challenging assignments, and 19 of
whom are for entrance into their
Transportation, Engrg., Maintenance of
Way, and Purchasing functions of their
business.
U.s. Civil Service Commission an-
nounces examinations for Medical Of-
fice and Statistical Draftsman, Em-
ployee Development Officer and Ocean-
ographer. Also on file at the Bureau is
a list of federal job opportunities for
persons entitled to 10 point veteran
preference.
New York State announces examina-
tions to be held April 30 for: Asst. Civil
Engr., Jr. Engr., Asst. Industrial Supt.,
Identification Officer, Sr. Id. Officer,
Sr. Economist, Housing Mgt. Represen-
Nave a WORLD of FUN!
A T~velwith $ETA
U/beevobe Low Cost
Europe
60 ..,s ,, +tm $675
LLSS0 4-65 Deysd, ~
fi'e $99

tative, Jr. Insurance Qualifications Ex-
aminer, Jr. Public Health Education,
and Director of Cottage Program. Clos-
ing date for applications is March 26.
Delco Radio Div., GMC, Kokomo,
Ind., has opening in their Acoustical
Engrg. Lab. Interested in a man with
an advanced degree in EE or physics
and specific courses in acoustics and
loudspeaker design.
Travelers Ins. Co., is seeking six men
to fill available positions in the area of
Acctg.: one man - grad. of an acctg.
school with 2-3 yrs. practical exper-
ience; one man - with same back-
ground for cost acctg.; and four men-
grads of liberal arts colleges with or
without a major in acctg. but prefer-
ably with a background in the follow-
ing courses: basic acctg. course, stat.,
business law, and elementary econ.,
no experience necessary.
Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis, Ind.,
and other locations, has opening for:
Assoc. Plant Pathologist, Cost Account-
ant, Assoc. Librarian-Library Business
Service (Women), and Market Research
Analyst and Forecaster. Also Interest-
ed in any foreign students from
France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland,
Colombia, Argentina, Brazil and Mexi-
co who might be interested in summer
employment opportunities in their In-
dianapolis Internat'l headquarters.
Kalamazoo Block & Pipe Co., Port-
age, Mich., is looking for an Engr. of
the class of '60, '59 or '58, preferably
a Civil Engr. who is interested in a
sales career where his background
would be beneficial. Will do consider-
able traveling in a limited area,
Ben Z. Rubin Co., Detroit, has need
of a Sales Engr. for Analog Computers.
Should have training through differen-
tial equations and training in physics
and preferably some experience in ap-
plied math.
Aetna Life Ins. Co., Saginaw, Mich.,
has need of Salesmen - for special
sales work with Estate Control Plan,
Group and Business Ins. Openings in
Saginaw. Flint, Bay City and all of
N.E. Mich.
University of Colorado has an open-
ing for an additional staff member to
serve as Radio-TV Director-Producer.
Job description is on file at the Bu-
reau.
Gibson Refrigerator Div., Greenville,
Mich., Is in need of an Export Service
Administrative Asst. Applicants must
speak fluent Spanish, Prefer native
American with some experience in the
export field.
Central Farmers Fertilizer Co., Chi-
cago, Ill., is seeking: Process Chemical
Engr. with no experience; Process
Chem. Engr. with 1-5 yrs. experience;
Design Chemical Engr. with 5-10 yrs.
experience; and Analytical Chemist
with 1-5 yrs. experience.
Northern Ill. University, DeKalb, Ill.,
has opening for Director of Radio and
TV in the Div. of Regional Services.
Should have a master's'degree or bet-
ter, and his area of concentration
should be either in raido speech or
journalism with minors in English and
speech, radio and/or education pre-
ferred. Other combinations considered.

Also position for Asst. in News and
Promotional Services, with a master's
degree or better and his area of con-
centration should be either in jour-
nalism or Eng, with mindra in speech
or radio and education.
Solvay Process Div., Syracuse, N.Y.,
has openings for: Civil Engr., Mathe-I
matician, Power Engr., Chemical Engr.,
Chemist, Analytical Chemist, Design
Engrs.-Mining, Mechanical, Electrical,
Structural, and Engre. - Chem., Mech.,
and Indus.
City of Detroit announces final fling
dates for Key Punch Operator was 3/10
and for Animal Keeper, 3/21.
AC Spark Plug Div., Flint, Mich., has
a technical sales opening -- selling
products other than spark plugs, such
as oil filters, auto parts. Man with
technical background preferably an
engrg. background: ME, EE.
For further information concerning
any of the above positions, contact the
Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin.,
Ext. 3371.
Summer Placement Interviews:.
Mon:, March 14:
Portage Trails Council, Boy Scouts
of America. Mr. James Stevenson will
interview students for positions of:
Waterfront, Scout skills work, handi-
craft and dining room manager-must"
have scouting experience. Will inter-
view from 1:30 to 5:00.
Tues., March 15:
North Star, Camp for Boys, Hayward,
Wis., will interview students for camp
positions starting at 1:00 p.m.
Recreation aids and nursing aids
wanted at military hospitals all over
the United States. Come in to the
Summer Placement Service for details.
Women only.
The Summer Placement is open ev-
ery afternoon from 1:30 to 5:00, plus
Fri. morning from 8:00 until 12 noon,
in Rm. D528 of the SAB.
Student .Par t-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.
MALE
6 Meal jobs.
1 Lab dishwasher
2'Salesmen for rug cleaning co. (15-20
hrs. per week.)
2 Odd jobs.
5 Rms. in exchange for yard and
housework.
FEMALE
1 Lab. dishwasher
3 Typists (20 hrs. per week.)
1 Typist (mornings only, Mon:-Fri.)
3 Telephone callers. (hrs. flexible.)

1 block East of
1000 South Main

Daily 8:00 to 6:00
Sunday 8:00 to4:00

U

(Auhor of "1 Was a Teen-age Dwarf","The Many
Loves of Dobie Gilli", etc.)

I

I

THE THUNDERING MARCH OF PROGRESS
Today, as everyone knows, is the forty-sixth anniversary of the
founding of Gransmire College for Women, which, as everyone
knows, was the first Progressive Education college in the
n ited States.
Well do I recollect the tizzy in the academie world when
Gransmire opened its portals. What a buzz there was, what a
brouhaha in faculty common rooms, what a rattling of teacups,
when Dr. Agnes Thudd Sigafoos, first president of Gransmire,
lifted her learned old head and announced defiantly, "We will
teach the student, not the course. There will be no marks, no
exams, no requirements. This, by George, is Progressive
Education!"
Well sir, forward-looking maidens aIl over the country cast
off their fetters and came rushing to New Ham pshire to enroll
at Gransmire. Here they found freedom. They broadened their
vistas. They lengthened their horizons. They unstopped their
bottled personalities. They roamed the campus in togas, lead-
ing ocelots on leashes.
And, of course, they smoked Marlboro cigarettes. (I say, "Of
tourse." Why do I say, "Of course"? I say, "Of course" because
it is a matter of course that anyone in search of freedom should
naturally turn to Marlboro, for Marlboro is the smoke that sets
the spirit soaring, that unyokes the captive soul, that fills the
air with the murmur of wings. If you think flavor went out
when filters came in-try Marlboro. They are sold in soft pack
er flip-top box wherever freedom rings..
But all was not Marlboro and ocelots for the girls of Grans-
mire. There was work and study too-not in the ordinary sense,
to be sure, for there were no formal classes. Instead there was
a broad approach to enlarging each girl's potentials, both mental
and physical.
Take, for example, the course called B.M.S. (Basic Motor
Skills). B.M.S. was divided into L.D. (Lying Down), S.U.
(Standing Up) and W. (Walking). Once the student had mas-
tered L.D. and S.U., she was taught to W.-but not just to «'.
any old wayl No, sir! She was taught to W. with poise,
dignity, bearing! To inculcate a sense of balance in the girl,
she began her exercises by walking with a suitcase in each hand.
(One girl, Mary Ellen Dorgenicht, got so good at it that today
she is bell captain at the Deshler-lilton Ifotel in Columbus,
Ohio.)
(A0

ORGANIZATION NOTICES
Campus Elections: Polls workers La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia,
needed, for campus elections March March 14, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. Cafe y
15, 16. Sign up for a time and place, conversacion,
SGC headquarters, SAB. Call NO 3-0553 * *
or come in after 3 p.m. Student Activities Bldg. Admin. $d.,
* * * Desk Space Available on 2nd floor of
Congregational Disciples E & R Sti- SAB. Organizations interested in space,
dent Guild, seminar: "Symbolization." contact Stuart Dow, Rm. 2535, SAB by
Rev. J. E. Edwards, March 13, 9:30 a.m., mall by March 18.
524 Thompson. * * *
* * * Political Issues Club, coffee hr. Most-
Folklore Society, Guitar and Bongo ly social, and devoted to program plan-
Workshops, March 12, 2-5 p.m., SAB, ning, March 13, 11 a.m., Union Cafe-
* * * teria, S. Rm.
India Students Assoc., panel discus- * *
sion: "India's Foreign Policy," March Mich. Christian Fellowship, March 13
13, 3 p.m., Union, Conf. Rm. Partici- 4 p.m., Lane Hall. Speaker: "Christ
pants: Profs. Crane, Park, Sen. Concealed in the Old Testament."
B'NAI B'RITH HILL EL FOUNDATION
1429 H ill Street
Announces
Lecture No. 2 in series,
"WHAT'S WORT H LIVING FOR?
Some Guidelines for the Perplexed of the 60's"
Wed., Mar. 16 at 8 P.M. in Zwerdling-Cohn Chapel
Prof. George A. Peek, Jr., Assoc. Prof., Political Science
"A Coninuing Search for Truth"

BUSINESS SERVICES
REWEAVING-Burn, tears, moth holes
rewoven. Let us save your clothes.
Weave-Bac Shop, 224 Nickels Arcade,
NO J-4847.
TYPING These., term papers, reason-
able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590.
J2
Are you lost in the crowd?
Is that your trouble buie
Be an Individualist and be out of it!
Join the other outs at Ralph's,
RALPH'S MARKET
109 Packard NO 23175
(Just two doors from the Blue Front)
J39
GERMAN & FRENCH coaching for doc-
toral candidates. Experienced Swiss
tutor. Call NO 3-2927. J32
Reconditioned Vacuum Cleaners
81.00 and up
J. EABU SALES AND SERVIC
322 W. Liberty NO 3-3604
)J5
ONE-DAY SERVICE
AT SANFORDS...
Shoe Repairing
Hat Cleaning
Tailoring
Pressing
Shoe Shining
119 East Ann Street
Open 'Til 8 P.M. -
Also Sundays & RHolidays
(Opposite court house since 1927)
NO 8-8966
J21
Special Offers
March 1960
Atlantic-8 mo ................$3.00
Sat. Eve. Poast-37 Wks. .......$2.97
Esquire- mos$................2.00
Holiday-15 mos.. ..... .3.75
New Republic-9 mos. ............*3.00
New Yorker-8 mos..............3.00
Time, Life, Sports Illus., and News-
week less than $.09 per copy.
STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY
Call NO 2-3061
J31
FOR RENT
LARGE ROOM, double or single. Linens
and cleaned weekly. NO 2-8718. 075
NEAR CAMPUS-HOSPITAL, furnished
living room, kitchen, bath. NO 2-0070.
C76
LARGE ROOM, single or double. Linens
and cleaned weekly, NO 2-81.
74
SINGLE ROOM for men, one block to
Michigan Union. 509 S. Division, or
call 8-6757 before 8 P.M. ' C71
ACTUALLY on campus, clean 5 rooms
furnished. NO 3-5947. C20
CAMPUS ROOMS for men, reasonable.
Linens furnished. NO 3-4747. 017
ONE BLOCK FROM CAMPUS--Modern
apartment, 514 . Forest. Also room.
NO 2-143."C25
LARGE ROOM, single 8 per week. RU
2-4959, 5843 Geddes Road. C35
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.
Cll NO 5-7616 after 5 p.m. 087
DO YOU HAVE boarders moving out-
Rooms for rent? Apartments for rent?
Do you want a cheap, convenient,
widely read source to publish this in-
formation??????7?7? then - try the
MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED
042
NO 2-4786
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
IFriendly service is our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and acessor-
les, Warranted & guaranteed. See
us for the best price on new &
use dtires, Road service-mechanle
on duty.
ou epet more from standard
and you gt It"
1920 . University at Forest-
NO 8-0168
61
WHITE'S AUTO SHOP
Bumping and Painting
2007 South StateNO2-3350
62
SMITH AUTO UPHOLSTERING
Auto and Furniture
ReAnished - Reuphostered
Convertible Tops
NO 3-8644
TAR'S MOTOR SALES
Bumping and Painting
Used Cars Bought and old
NO 3-4510
Both at 507 S. Ashley
S
Protect your ear II
o Fall Changeover
*0Antifreeze

" Winter Lubrication
Complete Tune-up Service Available
GOLDEN'S
SERVICE STATION
60 Packard NO 8-9129
63
BIKES and SCOOTERS
MOVE IN
FAST CIRCLES?
Get a wheel!
Beaver's Bike and Hardware
605 Church NO 5-6607

,,,,,.r
r

Moray lows ,;w"di

Also low-cost trips to Mexice
$164 up, South Anwica $699up,
Hawaii Study Tow $591 upand
Ar.nd thes World $S S up.
7th Yma Asi Yaw Try.,i Ant
WOSLD.VEcLg, $
I WORLO TRAVEL re.4 n -s

I.!

TOMORROW EVENING at 8 at HILLEL

itMt W~'4f!C~~~6 6T~i6 -
When the girls had walking under their belts, they were
allowed to dance. Again no formality was imposed. They were
simply told to fling themselves about in any way their impulses
dictated, and, believe you me, it was quite an impressive sight
to see them go bounding into the woods with their togas flying.

Honoring Purim and Jewish Music Month

SONGS. ....................... ..,.............Muriel Greens pun, Soprana

ps I

I

11

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