PAGE TWO rME MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JANUARY 19,16% ___ ___ __ ___ __ _ __ ___ _____ _____ _____ THURSDA.Y.,_._ ANUARY 19 ., .. ,. 195& I_ Germans Say Year of Study At 'U' Short German students studying at the University under the German Visitor's Program are realizing that one year is too short a time to learn all they want to know about America, according to Wil- bert L. Hindman, coordinator of the program. Hindman pointed out that dur- ing the first few months, the 12 German guests had time to do little more than gain an overall impression of this country. "THEY ARE JUST beginning to understand the intangible factors that support the glittering surface of American life," he said. "Through dormitory bull ses- sions, classroom discussions and weekly seminar meetings with the program's director, the stu- dents are learning some of the basic needs of a democracy which seem so obvious to us," he explained. "The value of discussion, com- promise and the internal respon- sibilty of citizenship are now sensed by the German students," Hindman remarked. * * * THE DIRECTOR admitted the group's initial reaction to Amer- ica was typical of most Europeans. "They were impressed with the rush of the big cities, the noise, the bright lights and the material prosperity of the people." "Like most visitors from Eur- ope they learned the American educational system and Ameri- can appreciation of the arts are higher than they anticipated," he said.1 -_. ., ACTION, NOT WORDS: Prof. Benjamin Attacks Functions of UNESCO By JANET WATTS ian university in Japan where Attacking the educational func- "outstanding men will do a dan- tions of the UNESCO, Prof. Har- gerous job daringly. At least they old Benjamin, of the University of won't limit themselves to high Maryland, declared yesterday that level conversation." "UNESCO needs fewer noble words and academic busy work and more daring in undertaking tasks." Prof. Benjamin outlined the "Educational Foundations of the World Community" in a speech at Rackham Amphitheatre sponsored by the School of Education and the history department. HE DENOUNCED the UNESCO as "becoming more Parisian, more purely intellectual every day. We must not have an international organization that is becoming cul- turally nationalistic." UNESCO does some jobs well, he admitted, but "it could move off into thousands of other edu- eational directions instead of only 57 as it does now." He pointed out that it lists meetings of scientists, and piano recitals. "But why not a Mark Twain memorial collection, clari- net recitals or an exhibition of Burmese dancing girls?" he asked. * * * "THE DIFFICULTY is that the UNESCO lacks the daring to do the really important tasks. For example, it is afraid to study the educational facilities of Quebec or Russian satellite states because of political or religious difficulties." Prof. Benjamin called for an international university on the graduate level which would pro- vide study facilities for the cul- tural contributions of all coun- tries. The educator cited the case of the proposed international Christ- Civil Service Exams Open For Students Physical scientists and engin- eers, except doctoral candidates, who want jobs with government agencies must take the Civil Ser- vice examinations to be given in Ann Arbor next month, the Bu- reau of Appointments announced yesterday. Applications to take the tests for Junior Scientist and Engineer are obtainable at the Bureau, 3528 Administration Bldg., and must be filed by Jan. 31, according to Mildred Webber, assistant to the director. SALARIES RANGE from $2,650 to $3,825. The examinations are open to physicists, chemists, me- tallurgists and all types of en- gineers. Some of the agencies looking for such workers are: Food and Drug Administration, Bureau of Standards and Office of Naval Research. Summer jobs in these fields are also available through Civil..Ser- vice, Miss Webber reported. Col- lege sophomores, juniors, seniors and graduate students may have an opportunity to work for such Federal agencies during their va- cations. * * * THIS probational summer work allows students to participate in specialized training programs and become acquainted with the sort of work done by the various de- partments. "This is the first time since the war that all those below the doc- toral candidate have been required to take the Civil Service exami- nations," Miss Webber pointed out. CLASSIFIEDw ADVERTISING . FOR SALE MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .50 1.02 1.68 3 .60 1.53 2.52 4 .80 2.04 4.80 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline daily except Saturday is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue FOR RENT AVAILABLE FEB. 1-Cottage apt. with bath. Comfortable, attractive. Reas- onable to responsible people. Phone 3WH3493 after 6:00 or week-ends. )29F VACANCY for male students. Rooms can be used as apartment. No single rooms. Call 2-20_52. )47R ROOMS available for students' guests J-Hop weekend. Private home ac- commodations. Phonen2-9850, 12:30 to 1:00; 6:00 to 7:00 p.m. )3R TWO ROOM furnished apartment for 2 nien. $80 per month. Ph. 6415. )46R FURNISHED NEW HOUSE-3 bedrooms,; February to September. References. Daily Box 209. (4F LOST AND FOUND LOST-Old thin-tired bike. White grips, mud flaps on front. Left pedal gone. Call 2-3219. )29L LOST-Pearl choker between Martha Cook and Michigan Theatre. Reward. Call Phyllis Bartholomew, 2-3225. )31L 3 FORMALS-Sizes 11-13. Good looking. Very reasonable. For details Ph. 2-0874. ) 62 COAT-Grey, size 13. Curly lamb lin- ing $20. Also gown and matching robe. New pastel print on white. Size9. Ph. 2-0874. ________)63 COMBINATION-Tails and Tux, 37 long. Call 2-7231. )64 TUXEDO & TAILS-Size 37 short. Call 8403 after 5. __ 65 INVENTORY SPECIALS Michigan Sweatshirts, $1.79; Navy "T" shirts, 45c; 100"! wool athletic hose, 49c; B-5s type jacket, $8.88; all wool flannel pants. $6.49. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington._)6 ATKINSON"t PERFUMES $4.50 size -- $2.00 $2.75 size - $1.00 Floral Frangrancies CALKINS-FLETCHER N. University at State )5 ALL COLORS baby parakeets, canaries, love-birds. Bird supplies and cages. Mrs. Ruffins, 562 S. 7th, Phone 5330. )2B Special Group of Formals at $15 - sizes 10-15 COUSINS on StateStreet_)2 1949CHEV. DeLUXE Club Coupe, $1400. All accessories. Cost $1850.00 nine mos. ago. Dr. Lasky 2-2521, Ext. 339 or 480. )55 CONVERTIBLE Mercury '48. Excellent condition. Cream color. W.W., R & H. 15,000 miles. Original owner. Must sell. Can finance. Phone 2-8493 . )53 TUX-TAILS SET-Size 36-38. Topcoat and sports coat also, size 38. Phone 3-4489. )51 USED TUX-Size 38 Reg. Excellent condition. Reasonable. Call Ken, 8157. ) 61 FOR SALE TYPEWRITER - Underwood standard No. 5. Good working condition. $30. Call Don Couden 2-3481 after 7 p.m. )56 FOR SALE NOW-THE TIME to, t your order in for a TIME or LIFT? PLESAT doblerooms close to cau dle s ents. Ph, 6876. )27B BrNG YOUR week-end guests to the P Transit Home. 1133 E. Ann. Phone.,64115. )1R__________ LARG ATTRACTIVE front double for . lered male stulents. Has three win- dows, ne.t to bath, plenty hot water. -"nDUBLE ear campus. $6.50 eah. 120 N. In;alls 2-6644. )48R G WOMN STUDENT-om- feritble rnoom in faculty home. On bus line. Low rental. In exchange for baby it ing. Breakfast and laundry privileges. Ph. 2-2G66. )54R ONE MAN to share apartment with 2 rd stud nts. 1125 Michigan. Ph. 3-1791. )55R PERSONAL JOE Thankls _br tipping me off to the daily 38c luncheon special at . D. Ml Caftria. It really does in- clude an entree, potatoes, bread and butter, and b,-verage. What a buy! A. )42P LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 209 S. State Phone 8616 )1P CLUB 211 BULLETIN New Club 211 Policy-No expiration da,&e on meal tickets! Tickets hon- oh'd( on any- day. Need not be used ('n conse(:t tIre days. Your ticket ex- pires only when all meals have been punched. J.D.M\. _)42P STUDENTS-And otherwise! Attention The Michiganensian must put in its order for the number of 1950 'Ensians to be printed, by January 31, 1950. Please order yours today-so that we may order your 'Enslan for you. )51P _ HELP WANTED UNDERGRADUATE or graduate woman to work for room and board. Call 2-5151 after 7 p.m. )23H _CLASSIFIED A DVERT TISING -Daily-Burt Sapowitch VROF. HAROLD BENJAMIN Grant Honors Dean Lloyd An international scholarship grant of $500, named in honor of Dean of Women Alice C. Lloyd, was announced yesterday. Th grant, made by the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti branch of the American Association of Univer- sity Women, will be administered by the national offices of the or- ganization. Many people think that Ulrich's Book Store carries only ENGINEERING books . . . Ulrich's 'carry a very huge stock of used and new books for every course 1I 4 ~1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Assistant to the President, Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3:00 p.m. en the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1950 VOL. LX., No. 84 Notices Graduate School Admission: Ap- pli ations for admission to the! Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies for the second semester will be accepted up to and includinv Jan. 21. At that time all necessary transcripts and other credentials. must also have been submitted. Applications and cre- dentials submitted after that date cannot be accepted. College of Engineering, Regis- tration Material: Students enroll- ed for the current semester should call for Spring registration mater- ial at Rm. 244, Engineering Bldg., beginning Tues., Jan. 24, through Fri., Jan. 27, and on Mon. and Tues., Jan. 30 and 31. Hours 8:30 to 12 and 1:30 to 5. February Graduates: Dr. T. Lu- ther Purdon, Director of the Bu- reau of Appointments, will discuss work opportunities with all inter- ested Feburary graduates at a meeting to be held on Thurs., Jan. 19, 4:10 p.m., the Natural Science Auditorium. Dr. Purdon will dis- IMICHGA cuss opportunities for employment and procedures that coin be used -to assist graduates seeking em- ployment. All February graduates not yet placed are invited. Women Students: Application blanks for the course in Recrea- tional Leadership offered by the Department of Physical Educa- tion for Women are available in Rm. 15, Barbour Gymnasium. Group Insurance for Staff Mem- bers. A general meeting on Group Life Insurance will be held at 5:15 p.m. today in the Natural Science Auditorium. All University em- ployees who are participating in either of the annuity programs, full-time lecturers and instructors, full-time employees under 30 years of age who have had two years of continuous service and full-time employees over 30 years of age who have had six months of con- tinuous service are eligible to en- roll. If you are eligible and have not attended a meeting, or have not enrolled, you. are urged to avail yourself of this general meet- ing. To all students having library books: 1. Students having in their pos- session books borrowed from the General Library or its branches are notified that such books are due Wed., Jan. 25. 2. Students having special need for certain books between Jan. 251 and Feb. 11 may retain such books for that period by renewing them at the Charging Desk. 3. The names of all students who have not cleared their records at the Library by Fri., Feb. 3, will be sent to the Cashier's Office and their credits and grades will be withheld until such time as said records are cleared in compliance with the regulations of the Re- gents. The United States Department of Agriculture of Ithaca, New York has available a limited num- ber of research assistantships. Ap- plicants must be admitted by the Graduate School of Cornell Uni- versity as candidates for degrees in vegetable crops, biochemistry, nutrition, animal husbandry or agronomy. Radcliffe College of Cambridge, Mass., offers a limited number of fellowships covering the tuition fee in whole or in part for the year 1950-51. The 10-month's training program offers basic training for young women intending to work at the administrative level. The U.S. Civil Service Commis- sion announces an examination for Economist, grades GS-7 to GS-12. Specialized fields: Business Economics, International Trade and Development Economics, Fis- cal and Financial Economics, La- bor Economics, Forest Economics, General Economics. For additional information on the above announcements please contact the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Bldg. All manuscripts to be entered in the Hopwood Contest for Fresh- men must be in the Hopwood Room not later than 4 p.m., Fri., Jan. 20. J-Hop Weekend: Student groups wishing to have parties on J-Hop weekend, Feb. 10, 11, must file applications for approval for spe- cific events in the Office of Stu- dent Affairs, 1020 Administra- tion Bldg, not later than Feb. 1. Arrangements for house parties involving women overnight guests in men's residences must be ap- proved at the Office of the Dean of Women, 1514 Administration Bldg., before applications for ap- proval for specific parties are sub- mitted to the Office of Student1 Affairs. Any woman student invited to be an overnight guest at a house party at a men's residense, is in- structed to call in person at the Office of the Dean of Women be- fore the weekend to secure a writ- ten permission slip to present to her own housemother. This ap- plies only to overnight permission to stay in men's residences. Women students have 4 a.m. permission on the mornings of Feb. 11 and 12. Calling hours will not be extended. Automobile Regulations, between semesters: The automobile reg- ulations governing student driving will be lifted for all students on Thurs., Feb. 2, at 5 p.m. Except- ions will not be made for in- dividuals who complete their work prior to that date. The regula- tions will go back into effect at 8 a.m., Mon., Feb. 13, the first day of classes for the spring semester. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Wil- liam Raymond Correa, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "An Investi- gation of Mode Duplexing in a Circular Waveguide," Fri., Jan. 20, 2518 E. Engineering Bldg., 2 p.m. Chairman, L. N. Holland. Political Science I, Lecture Group A: (Prof. Barclay). Make- up examination, Thurs., Jan. 19, 4 p.m., Rm. 25, A.H. Zoology Seminar: Under the auspices of the Zoology Seminar the movie "Within the Cell," ani- mation of chemical processes in cell metabolism, will be presented Thurs., Jan. 19, 8 p.m. in Rack- ham Amphitheater. D u r a t io n about 30 minutes. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Jan. 19, Rm. 247 W. Engineering, 4:15 p.m. Dr. Imanuel Marx continues his talk "An eigenvalue problem in the theory of minimal surfaces." German 1, 2, 31 final examina- tion room assignments. Wed., Jan. 25, 2-4 p.m. Students meet with own instructor in following rooms: Bergholz, 110 Tap.; Bernard, 2029 A.H.; Bigelow, 2225 A.H.; Brown, 1209 A.H.; Fuehrer, 2231 A.H.; Gaiss, 2003 A.H.; Gumperz, 2219 A.H.; Hascall, 2225 A.H.; Heil- bronner, 2235 A.H.; Kratz, 2013 A.H.; 1leumann, 35 A.H.; Norton, 2 Tap.; Packer, 103 Tap.; Pott, 18 (Continued on Page 3) 4 DAYS STARTING TheT HEATRE GUILD present) LAURENCE OLIVIER in William Shakespare's on the Michigan campus NO. MAIN - OPP. COURT HOUSE P Arthur $ Penny SINGLETON. LAKE ADDED CARTOON I I STARTS TODAY Thru Saturday MAT. 30c NIGHTS & SUN. 40c "HAUNTED TRAILS" with ANDY CLYDE A MONOGRAM PICTURE "KIT FOR TAT" OPTICAL SERVICE for the Campus Area CAMPUS OPTICIANS 222 Nickels Arcade Ph. 2-9116 a Ilmakes and models I I I OPEN DAILY 1:15 P.M. ENDING TODAY! at 3:00 - 6:10 & 9:20 P.M. comedy Riotlo -~ - JOHN LUND - MARIE WILSON Diana Lynn -Don DeFer. Plus: at 1:45 - 4:55 & 8:05 P.M. e'1' d :a- i I RENTED SOLD BOUGHT REPAIRED '° kh 'yp ! i I LUNCHEONS and DINNER ... Served Family Style SPECIAL STUDENT SNACKS 9 P.M. 'Til Closing LIBERTY FISH & CHIPS .4 STUDENT AND OFFICE SUPPLIES v l 4f.tMB!A fPIRURE MORRILL'S fStarts Friday! 314 S. State St. Ph. 7177 "ICHABOD & MR. TOAD" fountain pens repaired "Trail of the Yukon" l a Continuous from 1 P.M. - 44c to 5 P.M. 7F1IId 5t STARTS TODAY 301 East Liberty -''I The EST as always ILD.." but"LILrdr v cifI R ;7777777777 1 I ENDING TODAY 44c until 5 P.M. Never such Sivinidancin' Danny Kaye-pets!!, WALTER SLEZAK BARBARA SATES -, , , , , , ,H And Look What Else!! C i i'j w I- 7k. YVONNE~ ~CHARXE ,'A TWEETIE PIE CARTOON Harlem Globe A Trotters in the News -I a ART CINEMA LEAGUE presents r: 17 !d m. ad - i A charming, animate Russian fairy tale "THE MAGIC HORMmSE" and The mnaster's art entertainingly analyzed. "RVB ENS" I I I I