8, 1959 THE MICHIGAI\1 DAILY ,. 19TIEMCGNDAL !mm OPEN UNTIL OCT. 12: SGC Sets Petitions Deadline for Board Positions Japanese Studies Center Makes Effort To Counter Aftereffects of Typhoon By DONNA MOTEL Petitioning for positions on the related boards of the Student Gov- ernment Council and the Adminis- trative wing staff will be open until October 12. Positions are available on the Human Relations Board, the Cin- ema Guild Board, the Student Activities Building Board, and the Early Registration Pass Commit- tee. The position of Personnel Director is also open. There is also one opening on the Human Relations Board, which will commence upon appointment by SGC and will end at the con- clusion of the following semester. I The function of this board is to promote understanding among the1 various racial, religious, and cul- tural segments of the University community, and between them and the Ann Arbor community. The problems of discrimination as 'well as of the adjustment of. foreign students to the University. and the community have been the. special concern of the Board. In addition, the Board works closely with the Ann Arbor Human Rela- tions Commission. Several non-students, including the University Vice-President for Student Affairs and Ann Arbor businessmen are also members of the Board. Policy Formation Individual members work on policy formation and discussion, and carry out interviews and in- vestigations which promote the work of the Board. Much of the work is of a confidential nature. Two positions are available on the Cinema Guild Board. They will commence upon appointment by SGC and will expire in May, 1960. The duties of this Board are to select movies for the weekly show- ing at the Architecture Auditorium an to designate certain campus organizations to receive the major portion of the revenues obtained from the sale of admissions. Correspondence, Records Individual members are also in- volved in correspondence, record- keeping, bookkeeping, selection of films and interviewing sponsors. Two openings of one year terms each are available on the Early Registration Pass Committee. This committee is responsible for the awarding of all special ad- missions to registration. Clerical Work The duties of the members in- volve the clerical work which is incidental to the issuance of pass- es, the inquiry into the need for passes for organization members, the interviewing of applicants for passes, and the conduction of in- vestigations into individual cases. There are openings on the Stu- dent Activties Building Board, whose function is to allocate the space of the building and to en- force the policy which covers the use of the building. These posi- tions are open only to members of the organizations which occupy the second floor of the SAB. The office of personnel director for a term which will be deter- mined by SGC is also open. Train Personnel The responsibility of this posi- tion is that of recruiting and training new personnel, perform- ing administrative duties in con- nection with the interviewing and nominating committee, keeping personnel records, personnel eval- uation and advising on personnel matters in general. The petitions can be obtained at the first floor desk in the Stu- dent Activities Building and must be returned to the same place. This Is Anne Cheers! Cheers for the team! Cheers for the sweater! It's really news ... a bulky wool cardigan with a raccoon- trimmed hood. You can even wear it under a coat, the better to keep your ears warm on a bitter cold day. Black or loden green . . . $17.98 For Town and College 302 South State Street Bourgeois? "They never thought we'd do anything so bourgeois," an Os- terweil resident said. The women's cooperative is reportedly the first to compete in intramural volleyball. "We actually play against sorority girls and everybody," another girl added. The Osterweil team takes the floor clad in sweatshirts adver- tising a sauerkraut company. "We won our first game," the first girl said. "On a forfeit." CITY: To uPlan Expansion The County Planning Commis- sion and the Ann Arbor City Plan- ning Commission met in a joint session last night to discuss a pre- liminary plan for the long range development of Ann Arbor town- ship. Work on the plan was under- taken by the commissions after FHA authorities refused earlier this year to approve homes in the township until the area had a plan. The plan, which has been given tentative approval by the Ann Arbor township, calls for the "ex- tension of land uses beyond the city and integrates the city and the township into a unified de- velopment scheme," according to Chief Planner E. F. Drabkowski. Drabkowski said the plan "in- corporates the inherent character- istics for which the Ann Arbor area is widely known and remem- bered - rolling residential home sites, a picturesque river valley, open spaces and parks and the cultural and research leadership of the University of Michigan. The development plan includes three elementary schools, one high school, one junior high school, a research and research- industry strip near the proposed Eastbelt Bypass as well as a 20- acre shopping center. There will also be a 350-acre park strip near Plymouth Avenue. Bridge Course Begins Today The first session of the League- sponsored bridge lessons will be tonight from 7 to 9 at the League. The eight week course is open to all, and Mrs. W. McLean will be the instructor. DIAL NO 8-6416 NOW SHOWING BRIGITTE By PHILIP SHERMAN The University's Japanese7 Studies Center is making a small effort to counter the aftereffects of Typhoon Vera, which recently struck Japan. The storm, which did great damage, has been called on of the' worst in modern history. Jack Moyer, Grad., said yester- day that the Center has estab- lished a Typhoon Relief Fund for aiding the Japanese in their re- pair and rebuilding task. $90 in Contributions So ;ar, contributions have come only from Center associates, and total about $90, but Moyer empha- sized that public support could,'be important. Contributors may come to the Japanese Studies Center, 633 Ha- ven Hall. The collection will close next Wednesday. He said that most of the Center members have been in Japan and just wanted to do a little about the situation. Small Amount Helps The money raised, he com- mented, would not be a great part of the total monies raised for relief, even a small amount would make a dffierence. All money collected will be put into the relief fund sponsored by the Asahi Evening News, a Tokyo English language newspaper. Many of the Japanese news- papers collect such funds, Moyer added. Grain Available He said he did not know of any other such funds being collected in the United States, but said the U. S. government has made grain available. Moyer, who was ;in Japan for seven years, commented on the 'attitude of the people towards the typhoon. There is a certain degree of fatalism about the typhoons, he said, since they come every year, but this does not keep the people from doing all possible to safe- guard their homes and possessions. Protection Inadequate There has been some anti-gov- ernment feeling too after the istorms, he said, since at times iflood protection was felt to be inadequate. Last weekend, 25,000 people were still clinging to rooftops in Na- goya, Japan's third largest city because of floods that devastated the area in the wake of the winds. Vera struck Sept. 26, with 138- mile-per-hour winds in the heavily populated central Japan. On the first day, 12,000 homes Starting Tomorrow... a ! 2d4E £zrhizgan Dm1t SPECIAL WHERE TOGO and WHAT TO" DO' Watch for this Feature EVERY FRIDAY were flooded and 13 were esti- mated dead. The next day, 1,250 were dead and over 1.1 million were home- less. In Nagoya, one of the hardest hit cities, seven ships were grounded and the whole area was called a "sea of the dead." By last Saturday, the total dead had reached almost 4,000. Aid Homeless Japanese troops and police, aided by American military per- sonnel, were sorting out the dead, L0o FIR s ci aiding the homeless and beginning the task of cleaning up. Food distribution services were beginning to get in high gear, but rice was being black-marketed at almost five times the legal price. Only one American airman was injured, but over one million dol- lars in damage had been done to military installations.. Typhoons are the 50-to-100 mile in diameter storms which rise in the Pacific in autumn, and are analagous to the hurricanes of the West Indies. To Discuss. Soviet Union University study in the Soviet Union will be the topic of a dis- cussion today at the University. The talk will be held at 8 p.m. in Auditorium B, Angell Hall, and is to be sponsored by the Com- mittee on the Program on Russian studies. Leading the discussion will be Michael Luther of the University's history department and Harold Swayze of the political science de- partment. Both were exchange fel- lows at the Moscow State Univer- sity during 'the 1958-59 academic year. Play Copies To Be Given To Libhrary Copies of the "Diary of Anne Frank" written in 17 different lan- guages and a facsimile of the original "Diary" will be presented to the Undergrad Library on be- half of 20th Century Fox. James A. Davis, director of the International Center, will accept the books so that they may be dispilay ed at the Center. Last weekend, the Ann Arbor Civic Theater presented the play "The Diary of Ann Frank." I IC I IAPA 'Urges Press Attack, The Inter-American Press Asso- ciation: has recommended an edi- torial attack on "the, bureaucratic interpretation of so-called 'execu- tive privilege' in the handling of news by the United States Federal Government. The IAPA further urged that a determined effort be made to con- tinue the people's "right to know" in the United States. It recommended that the presi- dent of the IAPA write to the American Newspaper Publishers 'Association, "calling attention to the hazard which confronts pub- lishers in the United States due to the Internal Revenue Service rulings. These rulings deny the tax deductability of certain adver- tising by private utilities and cooperative advertising by manu- facturers, and to urge their elected representatives to reintroduce leg- islation to nullify these rulings." A country-by-country survey conducted by the IAPA's Freedom of the Press Committee reports that the governments of Trujillo's Dominican Republic, Paraguay, Nicaragua and Bolivia are not democratic because: of violations of freedom of the press and arbi- trary restrictions on news publi- cations. All Leather by m11oXEES LOAFERS t1" Re.$7.95 0 Black 0 Brown Sizes 41 to 10 AAA thru B S Campus 619 L Liberty. Downtown 121 S. Main 2 STORES Where Qualify Shoes Are Sold i , N I IV Hutzels exceptional savings on: Skirts 11.00 If not specially purchased these skirts would be 14.95 to 22.95 Included in this selection you'll find plain worsteds, tweeds, nvelltv nrints and oithers Misses' sizes, 20 tc I' showiest m .Y. Wo~ad2. of an the. U 5M El I It )28. Sir-, qffjj7Am oil II