THE MICHIGAN DAILY INIOR COUNCILMEN: Students Participate in City Meetings Bare Boards To Be Modern YWCA-YMCA Independent Women To Hold Worksi By SUSAN FARRELL "Interesting" was the all-en- compassing word used by Ann Arbor's junior city councilmen to describe Ann Arbor's City Council meetings. The junior councilmen were chosen by the student councils of their high schools to participate in all Ann Arbor City Council meet- ings. The program was suggested by Mayor Cecil 0. Creal to stimulate student interest in the activities of city government and to give regu- lar Council members an insight into the opinions of the city's younger generation. Impressed by Variety "I was impressed by the effici- ency of the Council and the variety of topics on the agenda," said John McClusky, University High School's junior councilman. "The scope of our student coun- cil is much more limited," he con- tinued. "The City Council is more interesting." Sue Gaynor and ,Sue ,Brown, University- High's alternate coun-. cilmen, agreed with McClusky. "And everyone knew what was going on," they added. "They all contributed.". But McClusky pointed out that some Councilmen naturally knew, more than others about certain topics, especially the activities and attitudes of! people in their" own; wards. Sees Greater Capability + 'John Wernette, Ann Arbor High School alternate, also believed that some Councilmen were more cap- able than others. "And not just because of their party affiliations," he added. . In fact, Frank Willis, juniorl councilman from Ann Arbor High School, remarked on how very few political issues come before the Council. "Most of the things discussed were minor issues that we are not yet familiar with," he said. Willis expressed surprise that the junior councilmen were al- lowed to participate in Council meetings. "I'm interested in seeing how our reactions are accepted by the Council," he explained. 'Ma gnetisin Conference. T "o Be Held, Detroit's Sheraton-Cadillac Ho- tel will be the scene for the fifth annual Conference on Magnetism and Magnetic Materials from Nov. 16-19. An estimated 1,000 scientists and engineers from the United States and foreign nations are ex- Oected to attend the sessions. Prof. Dale M. Grimes, of the electrical engineering department, is directing local arrangements for the conference and will also chair , a session on "Magnetic Salts." Participants will discuss a wide range of topics, including the re- lationships between magnetism and superconductivity (in which metals become perfect , conduct- ors),' the use of magnetic ma- terials as memory units in com- "We don't have to worry about politics or re-election," he contin- ued. "About the only thing we represent is our school; and since we're young we're pretty idealistic. Our reactions to the more contro- versial issues should point up who on the Council is doing what for political reasons." "I'm afraid that ' the Council members will think that what we do in Council is under the influ- ence of our families," Willis said. "But this won't happen." "Our votes will tend to be unani- mous," said Mark Adams of Ann Arbor High. "Not necessarily be- cause of mere conformity but be- cause we really do have many of the same views. We have little political prejudice and are not subjected to pressures as are the regular Council members," he ex- plained. Council Will Gain "I 'think the Council will get more from us than they think they will," Adams continued. "If they underestimate high school stu- dents, they will be surprised'at the amount of insight we have." Adams went so far as to sug- gest that instead of three non- counting votes, the high schools be given one vote that does count. "This would give the Council. a youthful influence which, at pres- ent, it -lacks." After attending two Council meetings, the junior douncilmen are already concerned with stimu- lating public interest in the meet- ings. John Wernette said that it should. be stressed to the people of Ann Arbor that the Council 'meetings are public. Have Superficial Knowledge "Most people have only a super- ficial knowledge of their city gov- ernment," Adams agreed. "And the more they see their councilman in action, the more they will know how to vote in the next election." The junior council men have al- ready fulfilled "Mayor Creal's hope of increasing student interest in city government. John Gamache, junior council- man from. St. Thomas High, said several students have asked him about' the- meetings he attended, and a few even heard excerpts from.the meetings on raido. t r I i F t F t i a p ( i I p I I [ By FAITH WEINSTEIN Assembly Association will spon- sor a house officers workshop for the councils of all the independ- ent women's housing units Satur- day. All house officers, and Assembly Dormitory Council representatives have been invited to the annual Fall Offiedr's Workshop, an .all- morning event, and to a luncheon afterwards in West Quadrangle. The morning events will be di- vided into two discussion times. During the first half of. the al- lotted time the individual officers will meet with their counterparts from other houses: house presi- dents with house p r e s i d e n t s, treasurers with treasurers,' and so forth. Discuss Common Problems They will discuss their common problems and common solutions, to their, problems until it is time for the second set of discussions. The second time allotment is reserved for four specific topics. The groups will be divided up into four discussion areas, each with a recorder to take down all of the conversation. The first topic will be "Counsel- ing: The Opportunities on Cam- pus." The primary purpose of this topic is to spread information about the various kinds of coun- seling available on campus, as well as start discussion of counseling and its purpose. To Discuss Etiquette The second group will discuss "Etiquette: Corridor to Campus." This topic, according to Connie Kreger, '61, first vice-president of Assembly, came up last year in a discussion of a different nature, and was felt to be worth a topic. in itself for this year's meeting. "The Role of Activities;" will be the' third topic of discussion. Miss Kreger said that this is an old topic, but added: "Every year we get a new group of women new ideas on the subject," keep it worthwhile. Part of discussion may involve some of evaluation of Assembly, s fically as well as activities in eral. To Consider Upperclassme The last group discussion concern the role of the up classman and graduate woms the- dormitories. This will inc an evaluation of their respons ties and duties toward the ur classmen, and will probably include some discussion of u class housing and the Assen sponsored Honor Resident gram. Miss Kreger said the board not feel that enough of the men in the housing units k about the Honor Resident gram, and that the workshc an excellent way to spread information. r GOING UP?--This massive, unfinished structure will one day be the new, modern, combination YWCA-YMCA which is presently slowly rising on E. William St. between S. Fourth and S. Fifth. The building, expected to be completed by next May, had its cornerstone laid last month. DAILY OFFICIIAL B'ULLETIN] (Continued from -Page 4) IGraduate Studentow MIXER Sat., Oct. 24 9-12 P.M. RACKHAM BALLROOM Stag or Drag 50c per person m DUAL FILTER DOES IT! Mathematics Colloquium: Professor Douglas Dickson of the Department of Mathematics will speak on "Expansion in series of solutions of difference-dif- ferential equations" on Tuesday, Octo- ber 20th at 4:10 p.m. in.room 3011 An- gell Hall. Refreshments 3:00 p.m. 3212 Angell Hall. Communication Sciences Colloquium: Dr. John Holland will speak on "A Uni- versal Computer Capable of Executing an Arbitrary Number of Sub-Programs" Simultaneously." Tues., Oct. 20 at 3:15 p.m.; 2402 Mason Hal. Biological Chemistry Colloquium: Dr. Bernard R. Baker, Stanford Research. Institute. "Carbohydrates in Cancer Chemotherapy," M6423 Med. Set. Bldg. 4:00 p.m., Thurs., :Oct. 22. Coffee will be served in the department's read-, ing room (M5410) at 3:30 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Muham- mad Tayyabji Tayyabkhan, Chemical Engineering; thesis: "Diffusion of Gly- cerol and Sodium Chloride in Resins and Analysis of Ion Exclusion and other Solid-Liquid Mass Transfer Processes,'" Tuesday, October 20, 2038 East Engineer- ing Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, R. R. White. Placement Notices The following interviews will be held at the School of , ngineering, Engineer- ing Placement Service ,128H W. Engrg. Bldg., Ext. 2182 or 2021. Oct. 20, 21, 22, 23: Boeing Airplane Co., Seattle, Wash. and Wichita, Kansas. All degrees: AE, CE, EE,' EM, E.Phys, and ME. Also Physics' & Math. All degrees. Citizen- ship required. Feb. grads only. Design, Research and Development and Pro- duction, E. I du Pont de Nemours & Co., East- ern Half U.S. BS: Ch.E, CE, CC, E.Math, EM, E.Phys, IE. Mat'ls, ME, Met, and Sciece. MS: Ch.E, CE, EE, EM, IE, Mat'ls, ME, Met, Nucl. Primarily FeV. grads. BS and MS: All phases of Chem- istry, Physics and Math. Research 'and Development, Sales and Production. General Motors Corp., All Divisions, degrees: AE, Ch.E, EE, EM, E.Phys, IE, ME, and Met. Summer Employment: Please check Placement Office the day before for possible openings in schedule. Must be Male, U.S. citizen. Design, Re- search and Development and Produc- tion. Oct. 22 and 23: Garrett Corp., Airesearch Mfg. Co., Los Angeles, Calif., Phoenix, Ariz. All degrees: AE, Ch.E, EE, EM, E.Phys, In- stru. and ME. Also physical chemistry. Citizenship required. Design, Research and Development and Preliminary De- sign: Lockheed Aircraft Missiles & Space Div., Palo Alto, Van Nuys, Sunnyvale, Newport. All degrees: AE, EE, EM, E.Phys, Instru., and ME. Feb. grads only. U.S. citizen. Research and Devel- opment. ;Standard Oil Co. of N.J., Esso Re-' search and Engineering, Linden; N.J. All degrees: Ch.E, CE, EE, ME, Met. Summer Employment: Check Place- ment Office on Oct. 21 or 22. Design, Research and Development, Sales and Production. Esso Standard Oil Co., Linden, N.J. and N.Y.C. All degrees: Ch.E., CE, ME, and Met. Summer Employment: Chece Placement Office on. Oct. 21 or 22. De- sign, Research and Development, Sales and Production. Oct. 23: Republic Steel Corp., Central Alloy District, Carlton. BS: EE, ME, Met. Feb. grads. only. Male, U.S. citizen. Design, Research and Development and Pro- duction. Wyandotte Chemicals Corp., Wyan- dotte, Mich. BS: Ch.E and IE. MS: Ch.E. Majors in Acctg. in top one-third of class. U.S. citizen, depending on as- signment. Oct. 22 (p.m.), 23 (all day): Jersey Production Research. Co., Tul- sa, Okla. Ph.D.': Chemical Engineers. Feb., June and Aug. grads. Also Physics, and Math. Research and Development. Oct. 21: The Chemstrand Corp., Nylon Plant, Pensacola, Fla. Engineering and Dev. group, Decatur, Alabama, Research Center. Raleigh, N. Carolina. All de- grees: Ch.E. and ME. Feb., June, Aug. grads. U.S. citizen. Summer Employ- ment: Please check Placement Office on Oct. 20. Design, Research and Develop- ment,.and Production. Cooper-Bessemer Corp., Mt. Vernon, Ohio. ES:i Ch.E., E.Math., EMYE. 'ME, and Met. MS: ME. Feb. grads only. Male, U.S. citzen. Design, Research' ald, Development. Sales and. Production, Digital Computer Application. Lehigh Portland Cement Co., Allen- town, Pa. Mfg. Div. - Throughout the U.S. Service Dept., throughout the U.S, BS: Ch.E. and CE. Production and Civil Service Engineering. University of Mich. Willow Run Labs., Ann Arbor, Mich. ES: EE. E.Math, E.Phys. MS -and Ph.D.: EE and Ynstru. Feb. and June grads. Res. and Dev. U.S. "citizen. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co., Chica- go area. BS: ME. Feb. grads only. Male, U.S. citizen: Production. Republic Aviation Corp., Farming- dale, L.I., N.Y., Stauffer Chemical Co., N.Y., N.Y. BS and MS: Ch.E, Research and Develop- ment, Sales and Production. Oct. 21, (a.ml.) r Socony-Mobil Oil Co., Inc., Magnolia Petroleum: Co., Field Res. Lab., Dallas, Texas. Oct. 21 (p.m.): Institute of Paper Chemistry, Appleton, Wisc. All degrees: Ch.E. Research and Development and Grad. School Instruc- tion. Oct. 21 and 22: Shell Development Co., Exploration and Prod. Res. Div,, Houston, Texas. Ph.D.: EM, ME and CE Male, Feb., June and Aug. grads. Research and Devel- opment. - Notice: Panel Discussion, Thurs., Oct. 23, 4-5 p.m., Multipurpose Rm., Under- graduate Library. The Bureau ?o f Ap- pointments presents Young Presidents, Inc. Five members who are presidents of their own firms and who are under 40 years of age, will hold a panel dis- cussion on "Competition and the Busi- ness Climate." Charles City, Iowa--Speech Therapists Mt. Clemens-Social Studies...... Morenci, Mich.-HS Math. ........ Ypsilanti, Mich.-Jr. High Guidance and Counseling. For any additional information con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. 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: Monday through Friday, 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 1 Translate Dutch 1 French Tutor 4 Assts. in Research (must be avail- able,20 hrs./wk. between 8-5, Mon.,- Fri.) 6 Hang Storm Windows 10 Assorted Tardwork FEMALE 1 Translate Dutch I French Tutor 1 Switchboard Operator (Mon.-Frl.,, 4-10 p.m.) 6 Housework L aura Learns Fast I She'd scarcely checked into the dqrm before Asmodeus showed up with his - -. British beanie and Latin leer. Five weeks later she's learned that a hairy lip can mean a close shave. She's learned, too, that a fresh and friendly appearance can help to extend the scope of a girl's activities . . . that she doesn't have to settle for the first wolf at the door. Like thousands of alert Michigan girls before her, Laura has *TURNED TO TROJAN For more than thirty years, now, Trojan has been solving the clean clothes problems of Michigan students. Trojan knows full well that favorite frocks must last the season through . . . must always retain the drape and flair that first caught a lady's eye. That's why Trojan restores as it cleans . . . takes the extra pains required to follow original form while refreshing fine fabric. Along with your dry cleaning, remember to send -your blouses to Trojan. That's the best way to insure the extra crisp, clean look that makes blouses so attractive and popular. Trojan hand dresses each blouse, returns it to you on an individual hanger to prevent unwanted creases. This is truly de luxe service, yet it costs but .40c per blouse. Get the Trojan habit. Then.. .compare the looks of your clothes with those of your friends who haven't discovered Trojan. There'll be a difference . . . and it'll be in your favor. Trojan picks up and delivers daily at all girls' dorms. Sororities just call, and we'll come running. Or stop by at our handy office on North U. near State Street. We'll be des lighted to see you. Either way, try Trojan. You'll be glad you did. DRY CLEANERS AND LAUNDERERS ANN ABROR and YPSILANTI Phone: NO 2-5200 or HUJ 2-8530 s i S I V . u: s ;> ax. g k$ r ti\.; The John Leidy Shop °u < HERE'S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT: 1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL..defi- Offers the most complete display e t t,