t.v.' PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1954 T Adult Classes Plan Offered ByUniversity Adults who havednever finished high school, including some who never went beyond grade school, can still enter the University, ac- cording to Clyde Vroman, alrec- tor of admissions. After passing Freshman en- trance exam program, students may work toward a degree, being permitted more freedom in their elections than usual students, Vro- man explained. Although few enroll under the program, those in it generally maintain better than average rec-. ords. Vroman cited the case of a man 60 years old with a grade school education who graduated Phi Beta Kappa. Comparing the University pro- gram to a similar one at Colum- bia University Dean Willard Olson of the School of Education laid the difference in numbers to a dif- ference in location. "Since it's lo- cated in New York City, Columbia doesn't have to depend on resident students." Orientation Men who have had exper- ience as student orientation leaders and who are interested in becoming orientation lead- ers in the coming semester may sign up at the Michigan Union student offices from 3 to 5 p.m. daily. I I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Prof. Katz Set As Engineers Institute Head Prof. Donald L. Katz, chairman of the chemical and metallurgi- cal engineering department, has been named director of the Amer- ican Institute of Chemical Engi- neers, according to an announce- ment made by the Institute yes- terday. Katz is one of four men among the institute's members chosen for directorships by letter ballot. Each of the 12 directors serves a three- year term. Katz is chairman of the organ- ization's nuclear engineering di- vision, and has served as a mem- ber of the Education and Accredi- tation Committee and the Publica- tions Program Committee. 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 Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication (be- fore 10 a.m. on Saturday). Notice of lectures, concerts, and organization meetings cannot be published oftener than twice. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1954 Vol. LXV, No. 69 Notices TIAA -- College Retirement Equities Fund. Participants in the Teachers In- surance and Annuity Association re- tirement program who wish to change their contributions to the College Re- tirement Equities Fund, or to apply for or discontinue participation in the Equities Fund, will be able to make such changes before Dec. 15. Staff members who have % or ?13 of the con- tributions to TIAA allocated to CREF may wish to change to a % basis, or go from the latter to a 1 or % basis. In accordance with a University regu- lation, students planning to spend Christmas vacation outside Ann Arbor must return library books to the Charg- ing Desk of the General Library (or the proper Divisional Library) before leaving the city. Special permission to charge books for use outside Ann Arbormaybe giv- en in case of urgent need. Arrange- ments must be made at the Charging Desk for books from the General Li- brary or with Librarians in charge of Divisional Libraries. Instructors' signatures for the month of December may be obtained before Dec. 17. DEAN'S MONTHLY CERTIFI- CATION must be returned to Dean's office no later than Jan. 3. VA Form 7- 1996a will be filled in and signed in the Student Christmas Vespers First Presbyterian Church TODAY at 5:10 P.M. Office of Veterans' Affairs during the week of Jan. 3. Applications for Engineering Research Institute Fellowships to be awarded for the spring semester, 1954-1955, are now being accepted in the office of the Graduate School., The stipend is $875 per semester. Application forms are available from the Graduate School. Only applicants who have been em- ployed by the Institute for at least one year on at least a half-time basis are eligible. Applications and supporting material are due in the office of the Graduate School not later than 4:00 p.m., Fri., Jan. 7. Kenneth Smith of Camp Charlevoix, Michigan, will be on campus Wed. and Thurs. of this week to interview pros- pective camp counselors for a boys' camp. Hemwould like men at least twenty years of age. Camping experi- ence is not necessary. Mr. Smith will be available Wed. from 1:00-5:00 p.m., and Thurs. from 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. in the Union. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: Wed. & Thurs., Dec. 15 & 16 Union Carbide & Carbon Corp., Car- bide & Carbon Chem. Co., Atomic En- ergy Installations, Oak Ridge, Tenn.- All levels of Metal., Mech., Chem. E., Engrg. Mech., Engrg. Math., Engrg. Physics, some Civil, Elect., & Ind. E. for Development, Design, Production, Plant Eng., Main Finance, and Re- search. Thurs., Dec. 16 Kimberly-Clark Corp., Neenah, Wisc. -B.S. Civil, Elect., Ind., Mech., Chem. E. for Design, Research, and Develop ment. New York Air Brake Co., Watertown Div., Watertown, N.Y.-B.S. & M.S. in Mech. & Ind. E. for Engineering in the Fields of Research, Design, & De- velopment. Students wishing to make appoint- ments with any of the above should contact the Engineering Placement Of- fice, Ext. 2182, Room 248. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Esterbrook Pen Co., Camden, N.J. is looking for a Sales Representative for the Michigan area (except metropolitan Detroit) and South Bend, Indiana. Man 25-30 years old, must have own car, prefer some experience. Residence in Lansing is preferred, but the headquar- ters may be moved from Lansing to Grand Rapids. Board of Civil Service Examiners for the Corps of Engrs., Detroit, Mich., an- nounces openings for Cartographers- GS-5, 7, & 9, Cartographic Aids-GS-1 through 7, and an Engineering Drafts- man (Trainee) GS-1. Both Cartographic positions require some experience. Car- tographers (GS-5, 7, 9) must have com- pleted a full 4-year course of study leading to a BA. Cartographic Aids can to a limited extent substitute education for experience. Engineering Draftsmen must have had at least three months experience in drafting or education on a senior high: school level including two -year courses in Drafting, Illustrative Design, or Mechanical Drawing, and an additional %-year course in any combi- nation of the above or Math, Survey- ing, or Physics. U.S. Civil Service Commission an- nounces positions for Claims Examiners, GS-7, 8, 9, in the area office at Chicago, Ill. These positions are open to college trained persons with a legal background or other appropriate experience. Gen- eral experience in Government, busi- ness, or industrial positions requiring a knowledge of laws, regulations, pro- cedures, precedents or business prac- tices based on law. First writtenrtest Jan. 8. Applications must be in by Dec. 28. I Civil Service,. Chicago Region,i announces exams for positions in fields of Business and Economics, gineering and Science, Inspection,I Stenography and Typing. also the En- and * Clean MNew o Modern h ; : .,i" , Civil Service Commission of Canada announces positions open for Junior Administrative Officers to work in the following branches: Indian Affairs, Ag- riculture, Fisheries, Labor, Nat'l. De- fense, Defense Production, Citizenship and Immigration, Nat'l. Revenue, Pub- lic Printing and Stationery, Finance (Treasury Board Div.). To apply you must be a graduate of a university or college of recognized standing, or to re- ceive your degree in 1955, and must not have passed your 27th birthday on Sept. 1, 1954. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, Room 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. Notice: The representative from the U.S. Dept. of State will be at the Bu- reau of Appointments Tues., Dec. 14, to interview for the positions of Inves- tigators. Academic Notices Mathematics Colloquium. Tues., Dec. 14 at 4:10 p.m., Room 3011 Angell Hall. Dr. E. L.. Griffin will speak on, "Rings of Operators." Seminar in Complex Variables will meet Tues., Dec. 14, at 3:00 p.m., Room 247 W. E. Prof. J. L. Ullman will speak on, "Approximation to Continuous Function; Lavrentieff's Theorem." Important meeting of the Lit. School Steering Committee today in Dean Rob- ertson's office at 4:00 p.m. Engineering Senior and Graduate Stu- dent Seminar: The series of meetings on "Human Relations for the Engineer," originally scheduled for this semester, have been postponed until the second semester, starting Wed., Feb. 16 at 4:00 p.m., Room 311, West Engineering Bldg. Sociology Colloquium: Dr. Kingsley Davis of Columbia University will dis- cuss "Problems and Ideas in Compara- tive Urban Research" at 4:00 p.m. Wed., Dec. 15, in the East Lecture Hall of the Rackham Bldg. A pre-holiday coffee hour will precede the Colloquium from 2:45-3:45 p.m. in the Sociology Lounge, 5607 Haven Hall. Doctoral Examination for Roberta Smith Hartman, Bacteriology; thesis: "An Electrophoretic Method for the (Continued on Page 4) MICHIGAN DAILY Phone NO 23-24-1 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .66 1.47 2.15 3 .77 1,95 3.23 4 .99 2.46 4.31 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 1:00 A.M. Saturday LOST AND FOUND LOST-Class Register on North Uni- versity or East University. Call NO 8-7651 immediately. )55A LOST: Braided gold watch chain, South University near Forest or Church. Re- ward. NO 2-1365. )57A LOST: Social Science 154 Notebook. Urgently needed. Ken Stoumen, NO 2-3191. )58A FOR SALE ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Sox, 39c; shorts 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )26B Our Annual Christmas Tree IS AGAIN AVAILABLE-to you for mak- ing your personalized photographic Christmas cards. You may use your own camera or ours and we will furnish the lighting and helpful sug- gestions at no charge to you. Store hours: 9 to 6 daily except Mondays, 9 to 9. Other evenings by appoint- ment. PURCHASE CAMERA SHOP i I FOR SALE 1948 KAISER, four door, heater, good rubber. The big lot across from downtown carport: Huron Motor' sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )191B 1930 MODEL T FORD, four door, new rubber, runs perfect. The big lot across from downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )190B 8170 Jackson Rd. Ph. HA 6-8134 3-A Approval .I FOR RENT FURNISHED -- Two bedroom campus apartment. Available Dec. 15 for 3-4 adults. Private bath. $140. NO 3-8454. )170 ROOMS FOR RENT BY DAY-WEEK-MONTH - Campus Tourist Home, 518 E. William (near State). NO 3-8454. )23D SHARE TWO ROOMS-basement-with two men. Refrigerator. Near cam- pus. $7 weekly. 1001 S. Forest. Phone NO 2-7639. )24D ROOMS FOR RENT-Male student, double rooms and suite, cooking privileges. Half a block from Cam- pus, 417 E. Liberty. )27D TRANSPORTATION WANTED: RIDERS to Maine, via Bos- ton. Leave Dec. 17, return Jan. 2. Call NO 8-8457. )16G RIDERS WANTED to Florida. Five cars (Three Brand New) leaving Dec. 17 or 18-$20, helping drive appreciated. NO 3-8177, after 6 p.m. )34G RIDERS, round trip Orlando, Florida, $25, '53 Ford, Beard, NO 2-3219. )36G DRIVER for private car to Florida, gas, oil, and guaranteed plane fare home provided. NO 2-6750, Mrs. Web- er. )26H PERSONAL LOOKING FOR A JAGUAR in your stocking? Why not treat him to a subscription? He'll remember you all year round. Phone Student Period- ical, NO 2-3061, days, eves. Pay after Christmas. )49F HELP WANTED DRAFTSMAN WANTED for consulting engineering office. Part time or full time. Familiarity with piping and chemical machinery desirable but not necessary. No Saturday work. Box 3. )234 COLLEGE GRADUATES Institution Social Worker I-Examina- tion now being given to fill present and future vacancies in scattered areas throughout state. Must have bachelor's degree. Salary $71.20 week- ly to start. Obtain application at nearest Michigan Employment Ser- vice office or write Michigan Civil Service, Lewis Cass Building, Lansing 13. )24H HELP WANTED DRIVERS WANTED-I need new Fords delivered to West Palm Beach, Flor- ida. Vacation in Florida on my at- tractive offer. Call Bill Petro for details. Days Detroit, Vermont 6-9087, nights Detroit Kenwood 3-8321. )25H BUSINESS SERVICES R. A. MADDY-VIOLIN MAKER. Fine instruments, Accessories, Repairs. 310 S. State, upstairs. Phone NO 2-5962. )10r WASHING-Finished work and hand ironing. Rough dry and wet washing. Also ironing separately. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone NO 2-9020. Wool soxs washed also. )81 WEBCOR 3 Speaker Musicale The first truly hi-fidelity table model phonograph. Hear it and compare it at ANN ARBOR RADIO AND T.V. "Student Service" Hallicrafters Radios and Television 1217 So. University Ph. NO 8-7942 1% blocke east of East Eng. )47E PRE-MEDICAL STUDENTS -- accurate, concise informational guide to the western European medical schools-- tsting admission requirements, ap- plication procedures, etc. Write "Guide," Box No. 422, Williamstown, N.J.; $2.30 prepaid or COD plus post- age. )161 PROMPT, accurate typing service. Call NO 5-4561. )171 REAL ESTATE CALL WARD REALITY NO 2-7787 for 2x3 bedroom homes-priced for students. Evenings call: Mr.. Hadcock NO 2-5863 Mr. Rice 3YP 2740-M Mr. Garner NO 3-2761 Mr. Martin NO 8-8608 Mr. Schoot NO 3-2763 )20 MISCELLANEOUS THE FINEST line of imported Holiday chocolates, including Swiss Tobler and Lindt, and Dutch Droste. Wash- ington Fish Market, 208 E. Wash- ington. Tel. NO 2-2589. )19L x' t Buy Christmas Seals WII 1116 S. University Phone NO 8-6972 )141 Save on Holiday Travel Vulcans Offer REDUCED RATES to Chicago, New York, Buffalo And Other Points East TICKETS ON SALE-Administration Building TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY 10-12, 1-4:30 SALES STOP WEDNESDAY] NOW SHOWING CecilB. .DelffuiS MIGHTY SPECTACLE OF LOVE AND VIOLENCE! i ' 1 - t C1 MTNa a aa. NOW -M s /oefo,. ROMANCE OrHE LAST TIME I SAW (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) The Students' International Travel Association offers a. wide variety of tours bound for Europe, South America, Hawaii, Mexico, Around the World, etc. With the stu- dent especially in mind. SITA offers everything from lowcost cycling trips to more comfortable rail and bus tours. Out-of-the-way places are explored as well as large cities. For detailed SITA booklets and complete information, please call any evening or weekend: Homer and Patricia Cooper, 1024 Hill; NO 3-1511, extension 544. (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) > - SLfftf Clffu4 Wash your vacation clothes at i 510 E. Williams Phone NO 3-5540 1950 FORD, two door, one owner, low mileage, good tires, radio, heater. Only $475. NO 2-7884. )166B CHRISTMAS TREES--$1.00 up. Drive in Pontiac Road at R.R. track, one block west of Broadway signal light. We don't want all the business, just yours. )20L ALMOST NEW Argus 03 camera with case and flash attachment $45, Call NO 3-3661. )180B 1938 PLYMOUTH, runs good, $65. 1948 PLYMOUTH SEDAN, $245. Fitzgerald-Jordan, Inc. 607 Detroit Phone NO 8-8144 )183B APARTMENT-SIZED WASHER, almost new, very reasonable. Call NO 3-3504. )188B 1953 FORD V-8 VICTORIA HARDTOP $1395 Two-tone flamingo and ivory Matching vinyl upholstery White-sidewall tires Chromium wheel covers Automatic transmission Fresh-air heating system Windshield washers Push-button radio A one-owner car. Will arrange terms. For a demonstration drive, call NO 3-3233. ).187B 1938 CHEVROLET, beautiful shape, private sale by elderly lady. NO 3-3267. )185B CHILD'S CRIB; new tuxedo, small; two-burner hot plate. Very reason- able. Call NO 3-8438. )189B 1948 DODGE, four door, radio, heater, one owner. The big lot across from downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )194B 1950 PLYMOUTH, four door, radio heater, snow tires, very clean. The big lot across from downtown car- port. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )193B er-ionaIzed CHRISTMAS CARDS RUST CRAFT CURRIER &- IVES ENGLISH DESIGNS MICHIGAN SEAL CHRISTMAS WRAPPINGS Since MORRILL'S Phone, 1908 314 S. State St. NO 8-7177 t f