.', OCTOBER 10, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY lpat*w , O C O B E R 10, 1959T H E I C H G A N A I L Y.n r u E. . SGC Staff Still Seeks, NEW PROGRAM: SGC Plan To Provide Training in Leadership Music Teachers Group To Honor Dean Moore MONEY, FOOD, WOMEN: Busboy Enjoys 'Essentials of Living' V Petitioner Petitions for Student Govern- ment Council staff and related board positions are still available at the main desk of the Student Activities Building. Two positions on the Cinema Guild Board and the Student Re- lations Committee of the Devel- opment Council plus posts on the Early Registration Pass Commit- tee, Human Relations Board and the job of Personnel Director are open. Student Government Council has instituted a new plan to provide more effective leadership for its administrative wing. The Leadership Training Pro- gram will hold its second in a series of eight meetings at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday in Rm. 1548 of the Student Activities Building. This second meeting will be the last opportunity for those inter- ested in the program to enroll. The plan was described by Phil Zook, '60, SGC administrative WEST SID ME TH OOI3 r CHURci . So S .SEVENTH 5T t No regular meeting Ws3 of Youth Groups. "THE WILL OF GOD FOR THE CHURCH"- --Dr. H. Vaughn Whited, preaching. vice-president, as an experimental' program which will inform train- ees in the structure, policies and facilities of SGC and the Univer- sity environment. After these meetings those who have com- pleted the course will gain experi- ence in many broad areas of SGC participation including committee service, officenmanagement, pro- gram planning and other fields which will give them an insight into the over-all program of SGC. Zook said that this program's purpose is to correct the defici- encies of the previous programs which based promotions to chair- manships principally upon service on a single committee. By giving the trainees broader training it is hoped that they will be able to carry out more effec- tively the work of the adminis- trative wing. The first meeting attracted ap- proximately 15 persons. Guest To Speak At Banquet James McDonald, the first United States ambassador to Israel, will speak at a banquet honoring Prof. Emeritus I. L. Sharfman of the economics department today. Dean Earl V. Moore of the mu- sic school will be honored- at the Michigan Music Teachers Asso- ciation's convention at the Uni- versity this week. The convention's 600 delegates will meet from tomorrow until Tuesday, opening with a banquet and concerts. Guest lecturer Alex- ander Tcherepnin, composer and pianist, will speak on "Education- al Problems in Music," at 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. on Monday in Rackham Assembly Hall. The Stanley Quartet, made up of Profs. Robert Courte, Oliver Edel ,Gilbert Ross and Gustav Rosseels of the music school, will discuss "Aids to Training the Stu- dent String Quartet" at 2 p.m. Monday in Rackham's west lec- ture room. Prof. Maurice W. Riley, of Eastern Michigan University, will moderate at the forum. Prof. Wiley Hitchcock of the music school will give a program on "The Works of AlbertrGinas- tera" at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Prof. Marilyn Mason Brown of the music school, will lecture on, "Three Centuries of Organ Music: Baroque, Romantic and 20th Cen- tury", at 2 p.m. Monday in Hill. Aud. Prof. Robert A. Warner, also of the school of music, will lecture on "Highlights in the History of Music," at 4 p.m. Monday in Rackham Assembly Hall. DEAN MOORE ... honored at convention at which Moore will be honored. Prof. Robert Noehren of the David Strickler of Albion Col- music school will give an organ lege will be toastmaster, and La- recital at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Vahn Maesch, Association presi- Auditorium in connection with dent, will be the chief speaker. the convention. Other convention plans include He will play works by Charles special guest lectures, discussions Tournemire and Oliver Messiaen (EDITOR'S NOTE: This article generalizes on the comments made by busboys interviewed in sorority houses on campus.) By CAROLE REGAN Money, food, and girls are the main problem of the college boy. He needs to know where to find them and, more important, how to keep a constant relationship with all three. A boy who "busses" in a sorority finds his problems disappear in regard to these es- sentials of daily living. One busboy began his career in his sophomore year. He had heard that sorority food was better than he was served in South Quad, and the job would involve time he or- dinarily wasted playing bridge or illegal poker. Learns First Rule The first night he reported for work he learned the all-important rule-no dating the girls in, the house. He contemplated quitting until the smell of freshly baked chocolate cake assailed his senses. He returned to the kitchen and put on his busboy uniform. The first course was delivered uneventfully, except for an in- terruption while he was eating his roast beef. Some girl in the left corner wanted an extra portion. He tried not to chew too notice- ably as he re-entered the dining room. Our new busboy soon learned that a spoon across a place set- ting meant no dessert was wanted. He rejoiced at seeing this because it meant an extra dessert left over in the kitchen. After dinner he could eat as many of these as he wanted, or as many as the other boys would leave him. Lists Grievances He began to draw up a list of grievances the night the cook served chicken. It tasted good, but was so messy to clear. The bones kept sliding off the plates into girls' hair or his fingers got cov- ered with gravy that had smeared on the side of a plate. He longed for an unsticky, boneless meal. He also was disgusted with a girl who came in late and sat where he hadn't set a place. This caused extra work when he could be in the kitchen eating. When he had been there a week he was assigned to the house- mother's table. He acquired a special affection for her when she smiled after he accidently dropped a spoon in her lap. Yet this was nothing compared to a friend of his who'd broken a tray of wine glasses at a fraternity alumni din- ner! ESSENTIALS OF LIVING-The bus boy In a sorority house finds all three-money, food and girls-in his Job of serving meals. Although his unique job brings grievances, it allows the oppor- tunity of studying comparative manners-and of course, better food. C DAILY OFFICIIA.L BULLETIN ,"_"1____________"..________________4____________________: .:.. ". fe ". .r , rr"' ._ ) sf0 de sna prel auh forj ahe rSPECIAL / PURCHASE! orion ,orated boleros 400 w white cover-ups be- aked with lace, pearls, d/or sparkles. ..your ttiest protection during Umn's coolness; perfect the gift-giving season ad. s, m, and I sizes. , a '}; ' 'Ct' ",n . , }, \ , 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. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1959 VOL. LXX, NO. 17 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold open house for students at their home on Wed., Oct. 14, from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. Concerts Concert. Glenn Gould, Canadian pi- anist, will be heard In the first con- cert in this season's Choral Union Series of the University Musical So- ciety, on Mon., Oct. 12, at 8:30, in Hill Aud. Mr. Gould will play the follow- ing program: Sweelinck's Fantasia for Organ; Schoenberg's Suite, Opus 25; the Mozart Sonata in C major, K. 330; and the Bach Goldberg Variations. A limited number of tickets are still available at the offices of the Univer- sity Musical Society in Burton Tower. Tickets will also be on ale on the evening. of the concert at the Hill Auditorium box office after 7:00 p.m. Faculty Recital: Robert Noehren, Uni- versity organist, will play the second of three Sunday afternoon organ re- citals on the Frieze organ in Hill Aud- itorium at 4:15 p.m., Oct. 11. He has included in his prorgam compositions by Bach, Messiaen and Tournemire. Open to the public. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Karl Wil- helm Roskamp, Economics; thesis: "Economic Growth, Capital Formation, and Public Policy in West Germany, 1948 to 1957," Sat., Oct. 10, 2A Econ- omics Bldg., at 10z00 a.m. Chairman, W. F. Stolper. Doctoral Examination for David Gar- field French, Sociology; thesis: "Social Work and Social Science: An Analysis of Their Relationship," Sat., Oct. 10, 5607 Haven Hall, at 9:30 a.m. Chair- man, R. C. Angell. Doctoral Examination for Jerome An- thony Fallon, Education; thesis: "The Influence of the Summer School Move- ment of the State of Michigan, 1874- 1931, with Special Reference to Thd University of Michigan," Mon., Oct. 12, E. Council Rm., Rackham Bldg., at 8:00 a.m. Chairman, J. S. Brubacher. Placement Notices Personnel Interviews: Organization Notices (Use of this column for an- nouncements is available to offi- cially recognized and registered or- ganizations only. Organizations planning to be active for the fall semester should register by Oct. 10. Forms available, 2011 Student Ac- tivities Building.) Congregational, Disciples, E & R Stu- dent Guild, Oct. 11, 9:30 a.m., 524 Thompson. Seminar: "Symbol, Myth and Sign." Graduate Outing Club, hiking, Oct. 11, 2 p.m., meet in back of Rackham (N.W. entrance). * * * Newman Club, dunkers hour, Oct. 10, after game, Gabriel Richard Center. * * * La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, Oct. 12, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. Conver- sation and coffee. * * * Luth. Stud. Center and Chapel, wor- ship services at 9 and 11 a.m.; Bible study at 10 a.m. Supper at 6 p.m.; pro- gram at 7 p.m.;.Oct. 10, Hill St. and S. Forest Ave. Speaker for the program: Dr. G. Mendenhall, Near East Studies Dept., "The Individual in the Old Tes- tament." The following companies will inter- view at the Engrg. Placement Office, 128H W. Engrg. Bldg., Ext. 2182 or 2021. Oct. 12, 1959 City of Dearborn Engrg. Div.: BS: Civil Engrg; MS: Civil Engrs. Male U.S. citizen. . Oct. 14, 1959 Griffis AFB, Rome, N.Y.: BS: Elec., Ind., E. Physics; MS: Elec., Ind., & In- stru. Citizen. Oct. 15, 1959 Burroughs Corp.: BS: BE, E Math, EM, E phys. & ME; MS: E, EM, ME; Ph.D.: BE, EM, ME. All degrees in Physics and Math. Citizenship required. Corning Glass Works, all branches: BS: Ch.E., EE, E. Math, E. Phys., IE, ME, Met., & Science; MS: Ch.E, EE, ID, Instru., ME & Met.; Ph.D.: Ch.E, BE, ME. Jeffrey Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio: BS: Mech. Engrg. Citizenship required. Monsanto Chemical Co., St. Louis, Mo.; all degrees: Ch.E. & ME, Chem- istry, MS: and Ph.D.: Physicshand Math. Also Summer Employment. New York Central System, Detroit, Mich.: BS: Ch.E., CE, EE, IE, ME & Met. Citizenship. Reilly Tar & Chemical Corp., Indian- apolis, Minneapolis, Cleveland, St. Louis: BS: Ch.E., CE, BE, & ME; MS: ChE, ED, BE, and ME. Citizenship. Victor Chemical Works, Chicago Heights, Ill.: BS: ChE;, MS: ChE and PhD: ChE. Citizenship required and Feb. grads only. North American Aviation (6 Divi- sions). Atomics Internat'l, Canoga Park, Calif.: All Engrs. and Science Grads, and Nuclear Engrs. BS: Physics or Math; MS: Chemistry, Math and Phy- sics; PhD: Chem., Math, and Physics. Autonetics, Downey, Calif.: BS: EE, EM, E. Phys., ME; MS: BE, ME; PhD: BE, ME. All degrees in Physics & Math. Also E. Computing) Feb. grads only. Citizenship required. Summer Employ- ment - Please check Placement Office on Oct. 14. Columbus Div., Columbus, Ohioa: BS: AE, CE, EE; MS: AE, CE, BE, EM, and Met.; PhD: AE, CE, BE, EM and Met.; MS: Physics and Math; PhD: Physics and Math. Feb. grads only. Citizenship required. Los Angeles Div., Los Angeles, Calif.: BS: AE, CE, BE, EM, E Math, & E Phy- (Continued on Page 4) Working 1Y2 hours a day, seven days a week, he soon found that the manners of some girls were good, and others were very bad. He wished that they would all put their silver in the middle of their plate when finished eating. This would save many needless scalp wounds. One annoying aspect he discov- ered in his job was the necessity of going to work - sober - every day. For if he came to work drunk he'd automatically be Ared. This rule was enforced following the immersion of a boy's foot in the dishwasher a year or two ago. He disliked not being free to do as he wished, but in this respect it was like all jobs. Friends told him that working in a fraternity was easier because it was not as formal. They could get finished faster and with less strain. However our busboy de- cided his working conditions were much more pleasant and "e'd stay where he was. 7 , Each week he counts up his ac- cumulated money, and then rubs his stomach. The only catch is thinking about all those girls he can't date. But then he remem- bers that his purpose in coming to school was to attain knowledge. And besides, there are plenty of other girls. Fill Position In League. The new coordinating vice-pres- ident of the Women's League is Virginia Sinclair, '61. The office was newly created last spring, and Miss Sinclair's job will be to coordinate League projects with those of other women's or- ganizations such as Assembly and Panhellenic. Her new position also places her automatically as chairman of the Women's Senate, and she will serve on council. Miss Sinclair is replacing Sue Moag, '61, who recently resigned from the office. Because of the newness of the office, Miss Sinclair will have little precedent to go on, but she has already begun gathering ideas for the Senate meeting. "I want to start well," Miss Sin- clair said, "so that coeds will be more enthusiastic about Senate." She plans to build enthusiasm by publicity and explaining the. Senate's function and value to women students. I Let the exotic enter your li fe when you enter thew..k. 11INII1A ARTF S HO P Imports. from all over the world i Come in and browse - 330 Maynard Street ________________________________ Il * . our tweed-texturvd sheath lends casual fashion; wrinkle. shunning freshness to your autumn THE SALE YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR FUR BLEND SWEATERS 9 .9 0 .r..... p I ,... I agenda.. .self. colared ocetate/ viscose with detachable white eolar. grey or brown. 10 to 20 sizes. 17.98 I E 11 II 1 11 ml i % $ -W WAVANNIEMMME