PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1953 F'RIDAY, MAY 22, 1953 GRAD fONANZA: Survey Reports Outlook Brih i for Senior Jobs f i By JANE HOWARD Job prospects for June college graduates are almost too bright. College placement officials all over the country reported in an Associated Press survey that the demand for graduates in almost all aspects of business and in- dustry is greater than they can supply. "In some instances," of- ficials of Denver University'said, "there are two jobs for every sen- ior." POSITIONS ARE especially abundant in fields such as per- sonnel, fine arts, journalism and high school and college teaching, where starting salaries are too low to compete with opportunities of- fered by other occupations. The only areas where jobs for graduates are scarce are in the "glamorous" fields, such as radio, television, public rela- tions work and advertising. Particularly in demand after 44c NOW! June graduations will be engineers and scientists, who are frequently offered far more jobs than they can undertake. Reports from various universi- ties and colleges indicate that the demand for placement is much heavier than it was last year, or at least as heavy. AT THE UNIVERSITY of Illi- nois requests for placement have gone 'up 25 percent, at Chicago, 10 to 12 percent, and at Stanford, 22 percent. Sex does not govern appoint- ments, employers stress, but some distinction is found in male-female starting salaries. In almost all fields except secretar- ial work and teaching, men's sal- aries are higher by $100 per month. * * * SCIENTISTS and engineers gen- erally may expect starting salar- ies $25 to $50 a month higher than last year's graduates. A.B. graduates will earn aver- age monthly salaries of $375. M.A.'s are said to be in the $400 per month bracket, while PhD's can expect monthly pay starting at $550. The chief ploblem presented by the excess of jobs, according to Sam H. Beach, director of place- ment at Columbia University, is that "there is no assurance that the right person is taking the right job. " Regents Okay University TV, Application The University, under authori- zation of the Board of Regents, has filed an application with the Federal Communications Commis- sion for an education television station. The Regents authorized the ap- plication and $169,000 for expan- sion and television equipment at a meeting in April, but it wasn't until Tuesday that the application was actually filed in Washington, D.C. Broadcasts are expected to be beamed over channel 26.j SL Guild Movie To Continue iRunu The SL Cinema Guild film "How' Green Was My Valley" will con- tinue its run at 7 and 9 p.m. today Evidences of an increase in interest in group dynamics re- search in the fields of community, military and business living were given last night by Prof. Dorwin Cartwright, director of the re- search center for group dynamic. Speaking before the political science roundtable in Rackham Awards Given, To Architects At a dinner meeting yesterday in the Rackham Center in Detroit, five students in the architecture school received awards from the Detroit chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Honored were Gerald Harburn, '54A, who won the award as out- standing junior, and Ellery Green, '53A, who received the Alpha Rho Chi medal. The Albert Kahn Scholarship was presented to James Bauer, '54A, with scholarship medals go- ing to Constance Abernathy, '53A, and George Howlett, '53A. Assembly Hall, Prof. Cartwright said that group dynamics was a field of investigation' which in- cludes the study of forces operat- ing in groups. Many people today, he contin- ued, are under the assumption that it is possible to develop gen- eral laws for all groups. This gen- eralization is false. However there is hope that in time an in- terdisciplinary relation will be possible. From the methodological point of view it is becoming necessaryj to examine group membership in order to determine actions and be- havior. These groups lend them- selves rather well to certain typesj of research techniques such as ob- serving groups in systematic fa- shion, he said. Star Observers Approximately 50 amateur and professional astronomers will gath- er at the University today and to- morrow for the annual meeting of the American Association of Var- iable Star Observers. Group Dynamics Discussion Highlights PoliticalMeeting _ _ __ __ S _ MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .60 1.34 1.96 3 .70 1.78 2.84 4 .90 2.24 3.92 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline daily except Saturday is 3 P.M., Saturdays, 11:30 A.M., for Sunday issue. LOST AND FOUND LOST-A half used check-book for Ann Arbor Bank. - Call 25-0153 after 6 o'clock. 52L LOST-Ladies gold Bulova watch on campus Tues. Lenora from Dad on' back. Call 6533 Angell Alice Lloyd. Reward. )53L ROOM AND BOARD ROOMS in Medical fraternity. Open all summer. 1315 Hillor 2.2252 after 6 p.m. )22C TRANSPORTATION R IDERS to Calif., share expenses, leave after June 6. Phone 317 Hinsdale E.Q. evenings. ) 19T TAKING CAR to California early June, want companion to share driving, expenses. Box 12 Daily. )20T BUSINESS SERVICES TYPEWRITERS: Portable and Standard for rent, sale and service. Morrill's 314 S. State St., Phone 7177 )2B WASHING, finished work, and hand ironing. Cotton dresses a specialty. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also iron- ing separately. Free pick up and de- livery. Phone 2-9020. )23B TYPING - Reasonable rates, accurate and efficient. Ph. 7590. 830 S. Main. 4B HELP WANTED TEACHERS-Register with us for em- ployment or advancement, No regis- tration fee required. Jobs also open for engineers, secretaries, and typists. AA Personnel service, 207 Municipal Court Bldg. Ph. 2-1221, hra. 9-5 Mon. thru Fri., 9-12 Saturdays. )60H FOR RENT CAMPUS-2 singles, 1 double. Lounging room, kitchen privilege if desired. 120 North Ingells. Ph. 3-0746 or 3-0166. )170 3-ROOM furnished apt. to sublet for summer session. $75 per month. Allyn Barrows, 2-3236. )24C FURNISHED APT. with kitchenette. Summer only; 3rd floor; private en- trance. No drinking. June 7-Sept. 15. $150 total. Phone 3-1441. )23C WANTED TO BUY USED MEN'S Raleigh bicycle. Must be in A-1 condition. Phone 3-4901 after 6:00 P.M. )12W WILL PAY up to $40 for girl's Raleigh. Preferably with oil bath and .Dyno- hub. Call Scott Maynes, 2-6141. WANTED TO RENT FURNISHED APARTMENT for eight weeks Summer Session. In lower price bracket, for graduate student, wife and small baby. Contact R. A. Dan- nenberg, Reed City High School, Reed City, Michigan. )16X MISCELLANEOUS 4 BURKE WOODS, 8 matched Spalding irons, all in good condition. $30. Call 3-0401 evenings. )121F SENIORS enjoy Time, Life, etc. next year at low student rates by phoning 6007 now. Save 12c per copy. )17M DON'T DISCARD your used clothing. Bring it to the Salvation Army, 220 S. Washington. )16M 4 and tomorrow and at 8 p.m. Sun- day in the Architecture Auditor- ium. FOR SALE ! III DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1' I LMiA:b M I Ending Tonight "TITANIC" BEHIND THE N withj PATRICE WYMORE - PLUS -- Pra pIT EON Marjorie MAIN KlCAJlON CLIFTON WEBB BARBARA STANWICK i { : : 4 The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Ronnm 2552 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (before 11 a.m. on Saturday). FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1953 V ol. LX III, N o. 16 ' Aeronautical Engineering Students. Certain improvements have been made in the Aeronautical Engineering cur- riculum. The staff wishes to discuss these changes with you and arrange your schedule for next year. Half-hour interviews for this purpose will be held Monday and Tuesday evenings, May 25 and 26, starting at 7:30 p.m. Please sign the schedule posted on the Aero. Eng. Bulletin Board opposite 1079 East Engineering Building. Student Accounts. Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on Feb. 28, 1936: "Students shall pay all acounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are sub- ject to this regulation; however, stu- dent loans not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at the close of busi- ness on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the Uni- versity and in at Moe's Sport Shop on North Uni-' versity and place your order. Veterans who have been certified for; education and training allowance under Public Law 550 must get instructors' signatures on Dean's Monthly Certifica- tion for May-June (one set of signa- tures) and return that form to ap- propriate Dean's office on or before June 3. VA Form 7-1996a for May and each certified veteran in the Office June must be filled in and signed by each certified veteran in the office of Veterans' Affairs, 555 Administra- tion Building, between 8 a.m. June 1 and 5 p.m. June 5. Arrangements for change of address for allowance checks must be made at that time. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS. The Timken Detroit Axle Co. will have an interviewer here on Wed., May 27, to talk with men June grad- uates in Engineering, Bus. Ad., or LSA about their Industrial Management Training Program. They need men for all phases of industrial activities. A representative from the U. S. Navy Recruiting Station will be at the Bur- cau of Appointments on Tues., May 26, to interview women students for posi- tions as Typists and Stenographers at Navy Headquarters in Washington, D.C. PERSONNEL REQUESTS. The Manufacturers National Bank of Detroit would like to have June or September graduates who are interest-3 ed in a banking career visit their Per- sonnea Department in Detroit. Women as well as men may apply for positions3 with their bank.l II tional Therapist. Men and women June graduates with aptitude, interest or training in recreational work may make application. Montgomery Ward, in Chicago, Ill., is offering positions as Junior Copywrit- ers in their Mail Order and Retail Sales Divisions to worpen June graduates who have majored in English or Jour- nalism. Advertising majors will also be considered. Summer Positions. Kline's Department Store in Detroit is inviting ten women from various colleges to represent their school on the store's College Board this summer. For appointments, applications, and additional information about these and other openings, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Academic Notices Graduate Examination in Zoology. The last two itr of %h r ~+ ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Sox, 39c; Shorts. 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )7B PARAKEETS, babies and breeders, ca-j .naries, singers, cages, and supplies.I 305 W. Hoover. Phone 2-2403. )IF 21" ADMIRAL TELEVISION, table mod- el. Brand new-still in crate. Price $190. (Retails for $220.) Call 3-2512. DENTAL SUITE for sale. Reasonable. Beautiful, modern, complete. Twenty years general practice on central lo- cation available at low rent. Phone TRinity 4-0162 or 2-3481 or write M. Rawsthorne, 749 Pallister, Detroit 2, Mich. )119F ENGLISH motorcycle, 1952 B.S.A. 250 cc rear-springer. Excellent condition. Ph. Ext. 2-880 or 3-0341. )120F MICROSCOPE - AO Spencer medical. HP, LP, oil; mech. stage, case, nearly new. Call 3-8708 eve. )122F CANARIES - Beautiful singers & fe-I males. Parakeets $7 and up. Mrs. Ruffins, 562 S. Seventh. )123F R.C.A. 45 PHONO-Complete unit, at- tractive case; best offer. Phone 3-4145 Ext. 634. )124F RADIO SERVICE Auto - Home -- Portable Phono & TV Fast & Reasonable Service ANN ARBOR RADIO & TV "Student Service" 1215 So. Univ., Ph. 7942 1% blocks east of East Eng. STUDENTS -- Take advantage of our special rates. Phone 6007. Charge your order. We handle change of address in June. Student Periodical Agency. )25B EXPERT TYPIST - Rates reasonable. Prompt service. 914 Mary Street. 3-4449. )8B GOOD rental typewriters available at reasonable rates. Office Equipment Company, 215 E. Liberty. Ph. 2-1213. )4B HELP WANTED WANTED - Carriers for the Michigan Daily. Openings now, in summer, and next fall. Top pay, early morning w hours. Call circulation Dept. 2-3241. )56H STENOGRAPHER-TYPIST for editorial office of national medical journal. Good opportunity to learn details of medical publishing. Please write RA- DIOLOGY, 2842 W. Grand Blvd., De- troit, 2, Mich., giving qualifications and experience. )38H WANTED-Taxi Cab drivers, full or part time. Yellow & Checker Cab Co. 113 S. Ashley. Ph. 9382. )54H PART OR FULL TIME Summer help wanted at Honey Brook Farm Market. Wages plus fruit, vegetables, eggs so forth. Marshall Richards 6400 Jack- son Rd. Ph. 25-8513. JOB OPPORTUN ITI ES MALE or FEMALE Graduate or undergraduate-for full or part time work on a permanent or temporary basis. Apply Montgomery Wrad & Co., Ann Arbor. )63H A )1B ROOMS FOR RENT Tomorrow - Saturday SUSSN4 CHARTON T iE PREsIDENTSLAY I I 11-lae woparts ox the Graduate I Examination in Zoology will be given ROOMS, roomettes and apartments by on Sat., May 23: Part 3. Systematic and day or week for campus visitors. Cam- Environmental Zoology, 9-12 a.m.; Part pus Tourist Homes, 518 E. William. 4. General Zoology, 2-5 p.m. The exam- Phone 3-8454. )3D ination will be held in 2091 Natural Sci- ence Building. ROOMS for male students. Suites. Double rooms. Separate kitchen with Astronomical Colloquium, Monday, cooking privileges. 1 block from cam- May 25, 4:15 p.m., the Observatory. Dr. pus. Summer. 417 E. Liberty. )31D Stanley P. Wyatt, Jr. will ,speak on RESERVE summer, fall rooms. Private. The Orientation of Galaxies in Space.." Near campus. maid service. Modern bath and refrigerator privileges. Call Doctoral Examination for Duane Eu- 2-7108. )39D gene Young, Conservation; thesis: "Ecological Considerations in the Ex- SUITE for 3, preferably G.I.'s. Part time tinction of the Passenger Pigeon (Ecto- work to defray cost. Also garage for pistes migratorius), Heath Hen (Tym- rent. Also, single room with board. panuCchus crpido cupido), and the Es- 520 Thompson. )52D May 22, 300 West Medical Building, 9 3 or 4 MAN APARTMENT available for a.m. Chairman, S. A. Cain. Summer Session. 2 blocks from cam- READ AND USE DAILY CLASS IFI EDS A a! '4 N4 III Friendly and Courteous Service 0 at the DINNER BELL Due to the help shortage we are closed on Sundays from 4 A.M., to 4 P.M. (a) All academic credits will be Kaiser Frazer Corp., in Willow Run, withheld, the grades for the semester Mich., is looking for a man graduate In or summertsession just completed will Liberal Arts to work as an Industrial not be released, and no transcript of Management Engineer. The job would credits wiIl be issued. involve working with problems of a non- (b) All students owing such accounts production type of industrial engineer- will not be allowed to register in any ing. subsequent semester or summer session William F. Husted Bookkeeping and until payment has been made.'' Tax Service in Detroit is offering posi- Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary tions to graduates who have studied Bookkeeping and Accounting. All Art Loan Print pictures will be King-Seeley Corp., of Ann Arbor, has due the last week of classes, May 25 openings for Product Engineers and to 29. The pictures should be returned Plant Engineers; graduates in E. E., to 510 Administration Building, hours M. E., of Chem. E. may apply. In addi- 8 to 12, 1 to 4. There will be a five- tion, there are job opportunities for cent fine per day for all pictures re- both graduates and non-graduates in turned after May 29. the fields of Quality Control, Produc- tion Control, and Time Study. Attention Seniors. This is your last Pontiac State Hospital, in Pontiac, chance to order caps and gowns, Stop Mich., is interested in hiring a Recrea- Doctoral Examination for Muriel Dor- othy Karp Ross, Anatomy;hthesis: "The Auditory Pathway of the Epileptic 1 Waltzing Mouse," Fri., May 22, 4558 East Medical Building, at 9:30 a.m. Chairman, E. C. Crosby. ROOM AND BOARD ATTENTION Summer Students-Excel- lent meals Monday-Friday, $2 a day. Call Jesse, Chi Phi 2-7363. )5S FOR SUMMER SCHOOL-Board & room reasonable; one suite and 2 singles on campus. 520 Thompson. )9S r Doctoral Examination for' James Clench, Zoology; thesis: (Continued on page 4) William "Origin a bargain offer " .0 v I I m rNEMA orPheu NOW- 50c Top CASH Prices Paid for your used TEXTBOOKS Sell them now before they're out of date . .. Sell at FOLLET TS State Street at North U. TODAY so"until 5 P.M. 7Tc after 5 Ot4 1SIN C WA-, GOI YOUBEEN H ASErANED S It's A Worry ,Y' I Phone 3-5651 EUGENE O'NEILL'S GREAT DRAMA I I v V Mother JJ and Daughter in love with same Man! Coming The Most Sinister Drama in History! Mourning Becomes Electra" -- NEW SCREEN - NEW SOUND - NEW PROJECTION I ROSALIND RUSSELL MICHAEL REDGRAVE RAYMOND MASSEY KATINA PAXINOVY 'Ii - ALEC GUINNESS in "LAST HOLIDAY" I I ihemaSL5udd NOW THROUGH SUNDAY John Ford's HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY WINNER OF SEVEN ACADEMY AWARDS - DIRECTOR - PICTURE - ACTING -- PHOTOGRAPHY - 10-inch DECCA records at only $2.50 BIZET: Carmen Suite No. 1 & 2 BRAHMS: Academic Festival, Tragic Overtures DUKAS: L'Appresti du Sorcier DVORAK: Slavonic Rhapsody ENESCO- Roumanian Rhapsody MENDELSSOHN: Midsummer Night's Dream Fingals Cave Overture 4 A I I 'I I i WALTER MAUREEN j BARRY PIDGEON O'HARA FITZGERALD DONALD CRISP MOZART: Overtures MOZART: Symphonies No. 26 & 32 MUSSORGSKY: Night on Bald Mountain SMETANA: Moldau Bartered Bride Overture, Dances J. STRAUSS: Waltzes R. STRAUSS: Rosenkavalier Waltzes ) "A slunnin master/piece, you can never expect to see a filn more handomely played." H- N.Y. Ti CA EXTRA! TECHNICOLOR CARTOON ,A _... 1111 I I U - .5 I I 11 I