THE MICHIGAN DAILY $S A'Y, NOVE ER 22. 1959 THE IIHCHIGAN DAILT STYNDA'Y. NOVI~MRFR 22. 1~fl 1 V / ] P DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ,4, j i +;;v. fi: Y^ I s'c :1 j : >:4 " Broken lenses duplicated " Frames replaced *"4Contact lens. fluid sold CAMPUS OPTICIANS 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. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1959 VOL. LXX, NO. 54 ~General Notices The student automobile regulations will be lifted for Thanksgiving vaca- ion from 5 p.m. Wed., Nov. 25, until 8 ..m. Mon., Nov. 30. February Teacher's Certificate Can- lidatest All requirements for the" eacher's certificatemust be complet- d by Dec. 15. These requirements in- lude the teacher's oath, the health tatement, and the Bureau of Ap- ointments nmaterial. The oath can be aken in Rm. 1439 U.E.S. The office is pen from, 8 to 12 and 1:30 to 4:30. Mail Orders are now being accepted for "Epitaph for George Dillon, the brilliant modern drama by John Os- borne, next production in the Play- bill series, Wed.-Sat., .Dec. 9-12, 8:00 p.m.,. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Mail orders to Playbill, Mendelssohn The- atre, shoul dinclude self-addressed, stamped envelope, and check payable to Play Production. Tickets available for Wed. and Thurs. performances at $1.50, $1.10, 75c and for Fri. and Sat. performances at $1.50 and $1.10. Block ticket orders being accepted for Wed. and Thurs. performances only. Lectures Lecture: Prof. of Romance Philology, Awin H. Kuhn, University of Inns- bruck, and visiting lecturer at the University will speak on "Romance Dialectology with Special Reference to Rhaeto-Romanic" on Mon., Nov. 23 at 8:00 p.m., W. Conof. Rim., Rackham. Lecture: Dr. George H. Brown, Mar- keting Research Manager, Ford Motor Co., formerly Professor of Marketing, University of Chicago, will speak on the "Inside Story of the Ford Falcon," Mon., Nov. 23, at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 131 Bus. Ad. Academic Notices Seminar: Michigan Marketing Club,, meeting, Nov. 23, 7:30 p.m., Urn. 130, Bus. Ad. Speaker: Dr. George H. Brown, Marketing Research Manager, Ford Mo- tor Co., "The Inside Story of the Ford Falcon." Open meeting. Automatic Programming and Numer- ical Analysis Seminar: "SPAC-A Com- puter designed for two-dimensional pattern analysis." by Mr. Robert R. Korphage on Mon., Nov. 23 at 4 p.m. in 3209 Angell Hall. Mathematics Colloquium: Prof. Jo- hannes De Groot of the University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, will speak on "Linearization of Mappings," Tues., Nov. 24, 1959, 4:00 p.m. in Rm. 3011 Angell Hall. Refreshments: 3:30 p.m. in URm, 3212 Angell Hall. The Inaugural Session of the South- ern Asia Colloquium will be held in the W. onference Rm. of Rackham Bldg. on Tues., Nov. 24, at 7:30 p.m. Prof. S. P. Sen of Calcutta University will speak on "The Study of History in In- dian Universities." Refreshments will follow the lecture which is open to the public free of charge. Engrg. Mechanics Seminar, Mon., Nov. 23 at 4:00 p.m. inR n.,218, W. Engrg. Bldg. Dr. F. G. Evans, Dept. of Anatomy will speak on "Studies in Human Bio-Mechanics." Coffee will be served in Rn. 201 W. Engrg. at 3:30. Doctoral Examinationfor George Charles Clark, Chemical Engineering; thesis: "Light Scattering in Dense Dis- persions of Spherical Particles," Mon., Nov. 23, 3201 E. Engrg. Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, S. W. Churchill. Doctoral Examination for Esther Jane Carrier, Library Science; thesis: "Fic- tion in Public Libraries of the United States, 1876-1900," Tues., Nov. 24, 10 (basement) General Library. Chairman, R. L. Kilgour. Placement Notices Personnel Interviews: The following companies will inter- view at the Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin. Bldg. Call Ext. 3371 or 5091 for an interview appointment. Tues., Nov. 24: The Equitable Life Assurance So- ciety of the U.S., Detroit, Mich. Loca- tion of work: Offices are located in all principal cities of the U.S. Graduates: Feb., June, Aug. Life insurance, annu- ities, major medical insurance, group insurance. Est. 1859. Employs 11,500. Men with degrees in Liberal Arts or Business Administration for Home Of- fice or Claims. The American Hospital Supply Corp., Evanston, Ill. Location of work: Train- ing-In Evanston, Ill., and ultimate re- location to other areas of the country. Graduates: Feb. Largest manufacturer and distributor of comprehensive 'line of hospital, equipment and supplies. *Military Status Will interview men draft exempt or planning on six month reserve program (cannot consider men going into the service for two years), Industrial Sales Training Program: American Division (Sales Candidates) -Men, 22 to 28, draft exempt*, academ- is requirements -- degree in Liberal Arts or Business Administration. Semi- formalized training program -- 6 to 12 months. Training to be held in Evanston, Ill., ultimate relocation to other areas of the country. Scientific Products Division (Sales Candidates) - Men, 22 to 28, draft exempt*, Academic requirements-ma- jor in any of the biological sciences or chemistry. Laboratory trainees, medi- cal studentsor medicalrtechnologists are ideal candidates. Training program -6 to 12 months in Evanston, Ill. Re- ceptive to relocation to other areas of country. Scientific Products Div. (Sales Spe- cialists)-Men, 23-28, draft exempt*, academic requirements-pharmacy, bi- ological science miajors or medical stu- dents. Brief training program, early assignment, further training in the field. Reassignment to other areas of country. Management: General Management Trainees: Men, 22-28, draft exempt*, Business Admin- istration, or Liberal Arts graduates. Trainin gin Evanston, Ill., as well as in locations of principal division offices. Semi-formal program. Office Management: Program to develop and train man- agement candidates to serve as Office Managers for division operations. Busi- ness Administration or Liberal Arts graduates, 22-28, draft exempt6, should have minimum of 12 hours accounting. Positions require two to four years of training in American's headquarters (Evanston) and division operations. Ultimate assignment will involve high levels of responsibility. Student Part-Time Employment The following part-time )obs are evailable" 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.in. Employers desirous of hiring students for part-time work should contact Jim Stempson, Student Interviewer, at NO 3-1511, Ext. 2939. Special Notice: All students who are interested in part-time jobs between Thanksgiving and Christmas please take notice: The University Non-Aca- demic Personnel Office has received? a large number of Christmas season part-time and full-time employment requests from local retail. merchants. If you are available for part-time em- ployment Nov. 30 to Dec. 18 plus full- time employment Dec. 19-24, please fill out an application in Rn. 1020 Ad- ministration Bldg. These jobs are on a first-come first-served basis, so it is to your advantage to fill out an appli- cation as soon as possible. 240 Nickels Arcade NO 2-9116 t Order Your PERSONALIZED CHRISTMAS CARDS early3 at4 S.LATE R'#S your college bookstore ''' :8g' !. ".":."."; sr." ;: v:.:;{."." ""O'. n t".;.}v : : :""r: ;"y.::":":; :":Mr0. r,::':j.;.v,;.l;. V. Y .yK"::"}:':: :Ot° ' .Aktr3+ Ltea a &'2en<6 'a .+,i'.S' hi". ' f2ita "'e£c''E J, itih 'r : r . I?; ,v +" __ r y r, d r 'n r R S r 5 rs a . G F C h 7 h C e e e s b c t 6 k w s y , C C Y °. 4 S CC F C i C A tribute to THE FACULTY AND STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN t - 109-121MAD LAEDORTveloIgthV e e , kitchen and dinette 13 STDIO PTS.Spacious Rooms Glass shower doors Venetian Blinds Playgrounds for Children Beautifully Landscaped Tile Bathrooms AE