THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1940 THE MIICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN L-1 i. Al 1 PAGE SEVEN Foreign Center Will Hold Open HouseApril 26 Athletic Events And Folk Dances Will Be Included In First Annual Event View Of University's Imposin g New PIca I're'awrlers , ;, . t-=-" 4 ' s '>~ ," « as t All Students Invita Foreign students will join to pre- sent their first annual Open House at 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 26 at the Intramural Building under the spon- sorship of the Inter iationa Center. With a program designed to ap- peal to the 6ports fancies of every- one, this Open House will present exhibitions, instructions and cham- pionship matches in 20 different ath- leti events and will especially feat- ure folk dances in native costume by several groups of foreign students. Tickets for the colorful affair are free and may be obtained by all stu- dents, faculty members and towns- people interested in the activities of the International Center at the Cen- ter offices or from any of the mem- bers of the Center staff. President Ruthven is expected to attend, ac- cording to Charlie Ochs, '4Ed, who is directing the event. - After the folk dancing which is scheduled to open the program, there will be an exhibition basketball game between the two top teams at the Center. Following will be an exhi- bition volleyball match between the Chinese team, perennial campus champs, and an international team. One of the features of the Open House will be an exhibition of soccer to be given on a miniature court by the Turkish students' team, cham- pions in this sport at the Center. Coach John Johnstone will direct the exhibition. The championship match of the Center in table tennis will be played. Sports in the free play period which will extend until 11 p.m. will in-. clude swimming, nacatos, paddle- ball, handball, rotation ping pong, fencing, code ball, basketball, ten- nis, wrestling, golf, badminton, table tennis, small games, boxing, squash, soccer, volleyball and archery. In- struction by members of. the I-M staff will be offered in all these sports. Union To Hold Second Record Concert Today Stravinski's "Firebird" Suite and Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 in C Minor will be featured on the second of a series of Union conducted re- corded concerts, to be given at 4 p.m. today in the Terrace Room. Yesterday's concert was the first to be given. They will be continued through next week, according to Charles Heinen, '41E, of the execu- tive staff. If popular, they will be continued. The third and final All-Campus Bridge Tournament, conducted by the Union, and previously slated for presentation this week, will be post- poned, according to Harold Singer, '41. Postponement was occasioned by the Ann Arbor City Meet to be given this week. The Union event was ten- tatively planned for next week. The high scoring team for the three All Campus Tourneys given during the year, will receive a large cup to be given for the first time for this event. The cup is on exhibit in the Union lobby. Charles Kerner, '41E, in charge of the finals of the Intra Campus de- bates to be held Sunday afternoon, announced that considerable interest had been ivinced because of the secret preparative activities of the two teams Fletcher Hall and Allen Rumsey dormitory. Both teams, Kerner said, had shown a great deal of originality in presenting their sides of the ques- tion during previous brackets, and all indications are for a heated final session. i f! . . { t' 4 i E I a uess Iow i11h AND DOLLARS TO DOUUHNUTS you'll guess too inuch! The ine fabrics, the expert tailoring, the careful attention to important things like fin- ished seams, deft stitching . . . details you find only in higher priced coats. Everything about these coats looks expensive-yet they are budget- priced at * '4' Ne w HeaIth Service Building Offers Many edicalFacilities To Stdents $j5.-O Returning students "ohed" "ahed" yesterday as they wandered through the shining corridors of the new University Health Service direct- ly across from the League on 12th Street after Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director, flung open its doors to in- augurate what has been called "a new era in health" for 12,000 Michi- gan students. Affording three times as much space as the old building which has been completely abandoned, the new Health Service from the exterior ap- pears as a four-storied building semi- modern in design and about 200 feet long and 50 feet wide with a rear wing. General Description Students seeking care at the new building walk up a short flight of steps and enter a tastefully furnished waiting room. On the immediate right, they obtain their records at a counter and carry them to the re-I spective waiting rooms on the firstl and second floors. The telephonel number of the Health Service hasl been changed to 2-4531. Eleven general physician offices, each with one large or two small ex- amination rooms, surround two wait- ing rooms in the north wing. Three rooms in this section are resrved for women physicians. Elsewhere on the floor can be found the pharmacy where student prescrip- tions are filled, the dispensary nurse's treatment rooms; a lecture room seat- ing 80; a staff room containing a small library; the administration of- fices, and the building telephone switchboard. Three stairways lead to the ground floor. Considerable space on this level is devoted to the pharmacy for the manufacture of pharmaceutical suuplies and allergins. Across the hall are stored 20 years of inactive Jackson To Talk On Work Camps Quaker work camps will be dis- cussed by Elmore Jackson, a mem- ber of the American Friends Service Committee, in charge of all work camps in this country, when he speaks and shows motion pictures at 7:30 p.m. today in IZane Hall, under the auspices of the Student Religious Association. All students interested in attend- ing the Work Camps this summer may make appointments at Lane Hall to be interviewed today by Mr. Jack- son. These camps offer an opportunity for constructive service in America's distressed areas. Physical labor is the basis of the summer's experience, and campers work from six to eight hours a day on various projects of value to the community where the camp is located. These include build- ing recreational facilities in cities., building roads, clearing timber, and I many other projectsI student records. These will be avail- able upstairs by means of a spiral stairway. The remainder of the floor consists of the kitchen, a statistical labora- tory where all records of research and routine tabulations will be studi- ed and filed, an ambulance and de- livery entrance, and a minimum of storage space. University storehouses elsewhere will be also used. Special Services Special services such as dermatol- ogy, basal metabolism, X-ray, oper- ating rooms, blood tests, allergy, den- tistry, physical therapy and fleuro- scopy are available on the second floor. Operations on this floor will be confined to those done under local anaesthesia. For the most part, they will be nose and throat operations. Bed capacity for 60 individuals is provided on floor three. There are 15 single, 11 double, 5 three bed and 2 four bed rooms. Each room has without bath. Five combination shower and bathtubs and one shower only are available from the corri- dors. The north end of the floor pro- vides for isolation service. Food is prepared in the kitchen on the ground floor and sent up by means of dumb- waiters. St. Clair Alumni Group To Hear Professor Aiton Prof. Arthur S. Aiton of the his- tory department will speak today on "The Lost Century in American History" at a meeting of the newly organized University of Michigan Club of St. Clair. Robert 0. Morgan, assistant secretary of the Alumni As- sociation, will also attend. T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- tary of the Association, will attend an organizational meeting today of the University of Michigan Club of Fine fabrics . . . twill, gabardine, wool crep wool plaids. /4< '7<4 ~777 Ij,< K /4 7./A -4, 7/.; 1' / "7 7> Look for femininer "dress" coats with li trims, young box bloused silhouettes. V. 7 A 7 / A) 7/ 4-4< 7/ .7 / / 47 / 77/ '7 / / tweed, cs and / / / / / ~cefers, 7 ingerie coats, -7 .7 /7/ 4/ '7 7/ coat at :7< ted to // 7/ 77 V / 7 / 7 7 / / >7/ 7/ '4/7 7/ In fact, here's a goodc far less than you expe pay. lockers and a complete utility room i Plymouth. Business School Job Aivision Finds Positions For raduates SECOND FLOO Graduates of the School of Busi- ness Administration are greatly aid- ed in finding employment by the placement service of the School, Prof. Charles L. Jamison of the school commented yesterday. The service is not operated in the form of a formal bureau, but is under the direction of Professor Jamison, who is aided in filing of data by Miss Dorothy Shapla~nd. Success of the work, in which vir- tually every member of the faculty of the School takes part, he said, can be atter.ted by the fact that ap- proximately 80 per cent of thej members of last year's graduating class had positions by commence- ment. Personal contact with graduates while they are still studying gives members of the faculty a knowledge, of their abilities which is very val- uable to employers, he continued. This aids, he said, in securing suit- able positions for employes land in filling vacant jobs for employers. Permanent files are kept on all graduates, including information as to numbers of interviews for em- ployment, records of work done in the School, places of employment and salaries when this is volunteer- ed. A questionnaire is sent to each alumnus of the School once a year in order to keep the files up to date, Professor Jamison said. The actual placement work is' made possible largely through in- quiries by companies which need trained men, he continued. These companies send placement men to most of the large universities in the 7 '7 N 'N N \ '' '\ \ _ ._> .> country, he explained,; cre thus brought into prospective employers.; been here so far this served. Alumni frequently School of openings in and students contact with 20 men have year, he ob- notify the the field of / /, 4 7 7\ Ipv business. Professor Jamison said, maintaining the School-graduate contact. Occasionally the School is- sues "blind" letters canvassing com- panies for openings, he added. Of the average graduating class, said Professor Jamison, approx- imately 50 per cent will enter execu- tive training courses of large indus- trial companies, 15 per cent will be employed as public accountants and ten per cent will enter family busi- nesses. The remainder, he explained, generally will be employed by banks, t irs or the government as econ- osmists, and statisticians or as teach- ers. The list of students desiring em- plo ment so far this year includes 66 names, Professor Jamison said. Of these, 12 have already accepted offers of positions, and 17 have not yet made up their minds about of- fers received. 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