wo THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEi DNESDAY, APRIL 20 Katy Johnson, League President An advanced radar photography system operates from aircraft containing radar equipment and a van on the ground containing the signal processing equipment. It has been developed by the University's Willow Run Laboratories in cooperation with the United States Army Signal Corps for airborne combat surveillance. The project has been termed "one of the most significant break-throughs in radar since the early days of World War II." (Continued from Page 1) them all together at the proper moment that is essential to both fields."' Varied Knowledge But it's more than organiza- tional ability that accounts for the success of Katy's television series and her enjoyment of her University life. The last to term herself an intellectual, Katy has a wide and varied knowledge that ex- tends from modern jazz and current literature to definitions of what Pater really meant when he said that the artist must "burn with a hard, gem- like flame." She is delighted to discuss jazz or the Italian Renaissance at length, but Katy would much rather talk about the people she has met on her travels about the United States and on her trip to Europe last summer. Leaving ' her organized tour, Katy tried to see more than the "superfiicial" sights avail- able to the ordinary tourist. More Comprehensive Katy feels her experiences in Europe forced her to become "a more comprehensive kind of person" and wants to return to Germany next year "not just to travel around looking for exotic places" but to study and do free-lance interviews for ra- dio programs. In an unfamiliar culture, Katy found, "You are more exposed to the elements than you ordinarily are and have to rely on people to a greater extent. Also, you de- velop perception and self- knowledge to deal with unac- customed situations." Learning to "play it by ear," Katy feels, is valuable to-a per- son's growth, especially so to someone who intends to make her career in broadcasting. Much of Katy's time is spent reading, "just for fun" and keeping up with her varied in- terests. "It seems to me that whatever makes me a better person, helps me be a better League president." From her time working in the kitchen of a Colorado resort at age 15 to her job de-tassel- ling corn in "dowdy" Downy, Iowa - "in a garbage pail at- mosphere" - to her life in the University, Katy's view of living as "a world of new relation- ships" has made her one of the most frankly happy people on campus. When her habitual good cheer is mentioned, Katy will flash a depreciating smile, and will exclaim characteristi- cally, "Oh, Good Grief!" I ~'U' Develops Radar System (Continued from Page 1) Others credited with significant From specifications provided by that might be reached during next contributions are Gilbert O. Hall, them and under a subcontract month's conference in paris. Wendell A. Blikken and Newbern with the University, the airborne Exploration of the concept of gineeringoecomponents of the system were gineeing.1engineered built and installed in MUSIC SCHOOL: 'To Play At Concert The 103rd music school concert of the 1959-60 season will be pre- sented at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, in Aud. A, Angell Hall. The program will feature Clyde Carpenter, French horn, Charles Fisher, piano, and Florian Mueller, oboe. the radar system and the develop- ment of the theory behind it were done by Louis J. Cutrona, present head of the Willow Run Labora- tories and Emmet Leith, also of Willow Run, and Weston E. Vivian, formerly with WRL and now a re- search engineer in the electrical engineering department. "To list all who contributed would be, in effect, to give a roster of the radar laboratory," Joseph A. Boyd, director of the Willow Run Laboratories and professor of electrical engineering, said. The ground-based data-process- ing equipment was engineered and built by Willow Run Laboratories., the L-23D aircraft by a Texas electronics firm. Development costs of a complete system unit (both airborne and ground - based components) were $1,200,000. It is estimated that future units can be produced at about one-half of the initial de- velopment costs. DAILYOFFICIAL BULLETIN i4 ! r{' hhliJ .}rLa .i } . r i "t1N l}Y : ..a I k . " fi}' i' :i.y ..{ The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1960 VOL. LXX, NO. 146 General Notices Attention June Graduates: Order Caps and Gowns now at Moe's Sport Shops, 711 North University. National Zeta Tau Alpha Scholarship. Eligibility: 1961 Senior, cumulative B average, evidence of need, independent ior affiliate. Two to be recommended from this campus. Applications open through Tues., April 26, at the Office of the Dean of Women. The School of Natural Resources will hold its annual Honors Convocation at 11 a.m. Thurs., April 21, in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Speaker, Dr. Joseph Fisher, Director, Resources for the Fu- ture. Applications for English honors cur- riculum: Students interested in enter- ing the two-year English Honors cur- riculum next fall should consult Prof. Carlton Wells, who can be reached in the Office of the Junior and Senior Counselors, 1223 Angell Hall. Appoint- ments can be made by calling 2823, or by seeing the secretary in 1223 Angell Hall. There will be no weekly tea on Thurs., April 21, at the International Center, 603 East Madison Street. Tomorrow at 4:10 p.m. the Depart- ment of Speech will present an original one-act play, "The Carriages of Gott- lieb," by Ronald Sossi, in Trueblood Aud. No admission will be charged. University of Michigan Graduates Screening Examinations in French and German: All graduate students desiring to fulfill their foreign language require- ments by passing the written examina- tion given by Prof. Lewis (formerly given by Prof. Hootkins) must first "pass an objective screen examination. The objective examinations will be given four times each semester (i.e., Septem- ber, October, November, December, February, March, April and May) and once during the Summer Session, in. July. Students who fail the objective examination may repeat it but not at consecutive administrations of the test (e.g., September and October) except when the two administrations are sep- arated by more than 35 days (e.g., De- cember and February). There will be two more administra- tions of the objective examinations in French and German during the cur- rent semester. The first will be on Thurs., April 21, in Aud. B, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. The last will be on Fri., May 6 in Aud. C, 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. Within 48 hours after the examinations the names of students who have passed will be posted on the Bulletin Board outside the office of Prof. Lewis, the Examiner in Foreign Languages, Room 3028 Rack-1 ham Building. Students desiring to fulfill the Grad-. uate School's requirement in Frenche and German are alerted of an alternatel path. A grade of B or better in French1 12 and German 12 will satisfy the for-] eign laanguage requirement. A grade of B or better in French 11 and Germnan 11 is the equivalent of having passed4 the objective screening examination. University Research Club, Women's Research Club, Science Research Club: Annual joint memorial meeting. Mem- bers are invited to bring guests. Papers: Prof. T. G. Winner, "Chekhov and Sci- entism: Observations of the 'Searching' Stories;" Prof. A. A. Lobanov-Rostovsky,' "Paderewski: Political Leader and Pa- triot;" Prof. Louise Cuyler, "Paderew- ski: The Musician." Wed., April 20, 8 p.m. Rackham Amphitheater. (Council, 7 p.m.) International Student and Family Ex- change. Have moved to new quarters at the Madelon Pound House (basement) 1024 Hill Street. Open Thursday morn- ings each week-9:30-11 00 a.m. Top- coats and sweaters for men and wom- en. Infants equipment and clothing and children's clothing. These are available for all Foreign Students and Families needing the above items. The following persons have been se- lected as ushers for the May Festival and must pick up their usher tickets at the Box Office at Hill Auditorium on Tuesday, April 19th, and Wednesday,a April 20th, from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.- Marian Aune, Howard Abrams, Anabel Anderson-Imbert, Thomas Albert, Peter Axelrod, Robert Amster, Peter Arnold, Elizabeth Beddoes, Barbara Brodkey, Annaliese Brookman, Dorothy Burnes, Lawrence Brotman, Virginia Bush, Cyn- thia Britton, Peggy Ann Bowman, Alice Brubacker, Nancy Barnett, Beverly Ber- ney, Helen Bruton, Susan Bergholz, Carol Bamberger, Margery Borssuk, Al- len Blaurock, Paul Blizmin, Dinah Ber- land, Robert Crowder, Pat Cartwright, Susi Cooper, Robert Cramer, Ann Cop- ley, Beverly Collora.hHelen Cywinski, William Crooks, Nathan Cohen, Lewis A. Coburn, Robert Ceechini, Ed Cohen, Edith Cook, Florence Duesing, Lee Anne Dieken, Geraldine Du Bree, Erma Don- ner, Don Derezinski, Shirley Davis, Judy England, Eleanore Eitel, Judith Ebner, Jim Edmunds, Richard Evart, Carol H. Foster, Mike Factor, Jerry Fuerst, Jo- anne Gobal, Rose Greenfeld, Audrey Grigsby, Beverley Garber, Carolyn Grow, Harvey Gendler, Jeannette Garcia, San- dra Gelder, Cyra Greene, Dan Glancy, John Hornberger, Parker Hallberg, Bar- bara Hess, Nannette Horton, Faith Hol- trop, Ron Hoffman, Cynthia Hall, Vera Hurchik, M. Ethel Heffernan, Charles Heffernan, M. Agnes Haynes, Robert Henshaw, Susan Henderson, Harold Heatwole, Robert Hackett, Norman Hal- pern, Edythe Josephs, Joanne Jonas, Jean Jahnke, Ann Harie Klels, Barbara Kimball, Simon Katzenellenbogen, Anne Kynast, Norma Kerlin, Erna Kochen- dorfer, Kermit Kreuger, Young H. Kim, John Kripl, Harold Lubin, Sigrid Link, Sheldon Larky,. Judith Lauffer, Charles Lindquist, Sue McGough, Helga Mathiss, Shirley Meista, Nancy Ellen McDonald, Lee Ann Marshall, Paul A. Moore, Shir- ley Moore, Janice Meyer, Gary McI- vaine, Phillip Nyhuis, Jeanne Nagel, Brenda Novak, Nancy Nagelkirk, Dan Orthner, Ann O'Neal, Sandra Orlovsky, Janice Peck, Bonnie Posner, Gail Park- er, Patricia Phillips, Susan Prakken, Diane Pfabe, Jean J, Pelcman, Jim Parkinson, Tony Pojos, Ruth Richards, Marcia Roeber, Bonnie Roeber, Martha Rearick, Viva Rimbaud, Jan Rahm, Mary A. Richards, Robert Ramsey Jr., Claire Semmerling, Carole Steide, Pa- tricia Smith, Laura Sarko, Ken Shu- back, Martha Shoemaker, Miriam Sing- er, Jean Seinsheimer, Marian Shaw, Marylou Seldon, Sandra Shapiro, Brun- hilde Schuster, Dan Slobin, Mary Ann Siderits, Barbara Shade, Charles B. Stallman, Jerome E. Sikorski, Lawrence Shaw, Fred Sansone, Ann Sansone, Sid Stein, Bobbie Sim, Barbara Tuczak, Vir- ginia Thompson, Nelita True, Nancy Thomas, Betty Toyzan, Henrietta Ten Harmsel, Laurel Tuby, Rosamond Von Voightlander, Virginia Von Schon, Irene Villemuere, Martha Vernon, Barbara Wolf. Virginia Ann Witheridge, Marian Ward, Charleen Wilson, Priscilla Wool- ams, Stanley Woolams, Sharon Wood, Jack Wyman, David Waters, Ruth Wey- man, Rita Zinkevies, Grace Zetterstrom, Joan Zandstra, Eli Zaretsky, Maurice Zilber. Recitals Faculty Recital: Florian Mueller, obo- ist; Clyde Carpenter, French horn and Charles Fisher, pianist, will present a recital including the works of Edith Boroff, Samuel Adler, David Stanley Smith, Karel B. Jirak, and Leslie Bas- sett, on Thurs., April 21, at 8:30 p.m. in Aud. A. Concerts The Stanley Quartet, Gilbert Ross, violin, Gustave Rosseels, violin, Robert Courte, viola, and Oliver Edel, cello, assisted by Clyde Thompson. double- bass, will be heard in the last of their spring series on Wed., April 20, at 8:30 p.m. The concert, to be held in the Rackham Lecture Hall, will include "Eine kleine Nachtmusik" by Mozart, Debussy's "Quartet in G minor" and the Beethoven "Quartet in F major." Open to the public, Lectures Lecture: Dr. F. H. Todd, Director, Ship Division, National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, England, will speak at 4 p.m., Wed., April 20 in 311 West Engrg. on "Ship Hydrodynamic Research in Great Britain." Lecture: Visiting Prof. of Astronomy, Herman Zanstra, will speak on "Rela- tivity, its philosophical Implications" on Wed., April 20 at 4 p.m. in Rm. 33, Angell Hall. Lecture: "The Guggenheim Collec- tion" will be discussed by Sam Hunter, Chief Curator, Minneapolis Museum of Art on Wed., April 20 at 4 p.m. in the Architecture Aud. Lecture: Dr. Osamu Hayaishi, Chair- man, Dept. of Medical Chemistry, Kyo- to University Faculty of Medicine, Ja- pan, will speak on "Enzymatic Degrada- tion of Kynurenic Acid, A New Path- way of Tryptophan Metabolism" on Thurs., April 21 at 8 p.m. i Rm. M5330, Med. Sc. Bldg. Academic Notices Seminar: Dr. John R. Pierce, Bell Telephone Laboratories, will speak on "Types of Signal Modulation and Space DIAL NO 5-6290 A ENDS TONIGHT * JOHVA ( that LOGAN ,College who 4 cait help Af' Al Tall Communication" on 3:30 p.m. in Aud. A. Wed., April 20 atI Sociology Colloquium: Prof. W. D. Borrie, Australian National University, will speak on "Population Growth and Research" on Wed., April 20, 4:15 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Build- ing, Seminar: Gases at Very High Temper- atures. Ralph Guernsey will speak on "The Theory of Irreversible Processes in Fully Ionized Gases." Room 1041 Ran" dall Lab., Thurs., April 21, at 4 p.m. Seminar: Dr. John R. Pierce, Bell Telephone Laboratories will speak on "Transoceanic Communication by Means of Satellites" on Thurs., April 21;at 3:30 p.m. in Aud. A. Psychology Colloquium: The "Eye Marker Camera and its Uses in Psy- chological Research" will be discussed by Norman H. Mackworth on Wed., April 20, at 4:15 p.m. In Aud. B. Coffee will be served in the Mason Hall Lounge at 3:45 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Virginia Koons vanBenschoten, English Language & Literature; thesis: "The Influence of Scientific and Socio-Scientific Ideologies on Some Examples of the Modern American Popular Novel," Thurs., April 21, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, N. E. Nelson. Doctoral Examination for George Roe Inger, Aeronautical Engineering; thesis: "Dissociation-Recombination Non-Equi- librium in the Laminar Hypersonic Boundary Layer," Thurs., April 21, 1508 East Engineering Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, T. C. Adamson, Jr. Placement Notices INTERVIEWS The following companies will inter- view at the Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin. Bldg. Call Ext. 3371 for an interview appointment. It is not necessary to register with our office to interview any of the or- ganizations scheduled to -visit the of- fe. We will require that you complete our College Interview Form just so the employer can have application informa- tion for your interview. To be registered is to your advantage, to have complete information on your background and letters of recommendation from em- ployers and professors. These records are permanent and not only for inter- views-if after graduation you are dis- satisfied with your position you ma4 again contact our office for leads or any specific openings we may have on file. We get lots of requests for experi- enced people l The last Federal Government exami- nation will be given on May 14, 1960. Applications must be received in the Regional Office by April 28, 1960. Ap- plications and information may be ob- tained from our office. These examina- tions will place you on the active list- ing for any government positions. Monday, April 25, 1960 American Institute for Foreign Trade, Phoenix, 'Arizona. Citizenship preferred. Men & Women for a one year graduate school specializing in training college graduates for positions of an executive z- type with companies having branches in I all parts of the world. Catalogues are available for your information. Group Meetings will be held. Tuesday, April 26, 1960 The International Ladies' Garment Training Institute, New York City, N.Y. Location of work-New York City, N.Y. Graduates--June. The Institute is a unique education institution, the first and only full-time school for the train- ing of union personnel. Men & Women,' between the ages of 21-35, and with any degree, for Training Program. Applicants who are selected will not be required to pay tuition, but will be expected to provide for their own subsistence. The Training Program extends over 12' months and is divided into five periods as follows: 1) 12 weeks in Institute in New York City; 2) Union work in vari- ous parts of the country; 3) 12 weeks is spent in study at the Institute; 4) Un- ion work in the field; and 5) study at headquarters. The School prepares young men and women for a career in the ILOWUJ as organizers, representa- tives, administrators, technicians and educators. Mobil Oil Company, Detroit, Michi- gan. Location of work-Detroit Division. Graduates-June. Nature of Business: production, exploration, manufacture, transportation, and sale of petroleum and petroleum products. Men with a degree in Liberal Arts or Business Ad- ministration for Marketing Training Program. Wurzburg Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Location of work - Grand Rapids, Michigan. Graduates-June. Re- tail department store. Men & Women with a degree in Liberal Arts or Busi- ness Administration for Retail Training Program. PERSONNEL REQUESTS New York State announces examina- tions for: Sr. Architect, Sr. Building Construction Engr., Sr. Hardware Speci- fications Writer, Sr. Heating and Ven- tilation Egr., Sr. Mechanical Engr., Assoc. Mechanical Construction Engr., Sr. Telephone & Sr. Telephone Inspec- tor, Asst. Supervisor of Park Opera- tions,. Scientist (Geology), Director of Health Statistics, Projectionist, Stock- room Worker, Tax Examiner, State Vet- eran Counselor, and Court Stenography positions. Final date for acceptance for applications is May 23rd, exam is June 25. Medical Organization In Ann Arbor Area is in need of two secretaries. Pre- fer someone who can take shorthand and has had formal secretarial training; Medical secretarial work is even better. Cook County, Chicago, announces ex- aminations for Caseworker I and Case- worker II-Public Assistance Div. Male (Continued on Page 4) I U 1 NOW! DIAL NO 8-6416 AWARD WINNER w EASIMAIKOIOR 1 A toy o fihlm . c.RlS SHOWS AT 7-9 P.M. FILM'?tEST VAL INDIA STUDENTS ASSOCIATION presents "THE TIGER AND THE FLAME" Story of 1857 English dialogues revolt against the British Colour by Technicolour Wed., April 20, at 8:00 P.M. UNIVERSITY HIGH SCHOOL I I NOW OPEN DOMINICK'S PIZZA NO WAITING Our ovens take only 3V/ minutes. OUTSIDE CAFE AND PRIVATE DATE ROOM ^n A L,1 1% '4E LUL II CI I