PAGE SIX 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY TIW WIWIGANf!'.L FRIDAY, MARC! 25, 1955 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) E. I. DuPont De Nemours & Co., Wil- mington, Del.,-candidates of all degree levels and undergraduates in Chemical, Engineering Mechanics, Ind., Mech., & Met. Engrg., plus Physics. Possibly, Civ- il & Elect. Engrg., for Summer Techni- cal Training Program Harris - Seybold Company, Cleveland, Ohio,-B.S. & M.S. degrees in Mech., Ind., Elec., & Chem. Engrg. for Junior Executive Development Program. For appointments, contactrthe Engi- neering Placement Office, room 248, West Engineering, Ext. 2182. Representatives from the following will be at the Bureau of Appointments: Tues., March 29-- Herpolshimer Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. (member of Allied Stores Corp. In various areas)-men and women in LS&A and BusAd for Accounting and an Executive Training Program. Tues. & Wed., March 29 & 30- Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Mass.- women with any background for Man- agement Training Program. A number of fellowships and loans are available. Wed., March 309-- Harris-Seybold Co., Cleveland, Ohio- men in LS&A and BusAd for Junior Executive Development Program, in- cluding finance and sales. Continental Casualty Co., Chicago, I1.-men and women in LS&A and BusAd for Management Training, Sales, Accounting, Actuarial, and Sales Pro- motion in main office and other loca- tions. U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Training Center-women any background for Of- ficers Training Class. Open to Seniors and to Juniors and Sophomores. Jun- lors and Sophomores will be trained during the summer and upon gradua- tion from college will be eligible to re- ceive commissions of 2nd Lieuteniant. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures "Ukranian Literature during the So- viet Period," Prof. G. Lucky, chairman of the Institute of Slavic Languages, U. of Toronto. Fri., March 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the East Conference Room, Rackham. Auspices of the Ukranian Club. University Lecture in Psychology. Fri., March 25 at 4:15 p.m. in Rackham Am- phitheatre. Dr. Kenneth B. Clark of the College of the City of New York will talk on "Some Implications of Deseg- regation for Social Psychology." Academic Notices Electrical Engineering Department Colloquium. Fri., March 25. Dolan H. Toth, Engineering Research Associates Division of Remington-Rand, "Magnet- ic Switching Circuits." Coffee-4:00 p.m. We Are Pleased To Announce MICHAEL MICKLEA s now vith 75North University Room 2500 E.X. Talk-4:30 p.m. Room from 4:30-6:00 pm. The Bahai Group is 2084 E. E. guild host., Astronomical Colloquium. Fri., March 25, 4:15 p.m., the Observatory. Lowell Doherty will speak on "The Luminous Shock Tube and its Application to Problems of Astrophysical Interest." Aeronautical Engineering Seminar. "Compressible Flows With Heat Addi- tion," by Dr. Adolf Busemann, aero- nautical scientist with N.A.C.A., Lang- ley Field. Fri., March .5, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 1504 East Engineering Build- ing. Doctoral Examination for Philip Dan- iel Bouffard, Chemistry; thesis: "Con- tact Angles as Influenced by Adsorption at the Phase Boundaries; Adsorption at Interfaces Formed by Mercury, Water, and Organic Liquids," Fri., March 25, 1565 Chemistry Bldg., at 3:30 p.m. Co- Chairmen, F. E. Bartell and L. O. Case. Biological Chemistry Seminar. "Acti- vation of Pancreatic Proteinases" under the direction of Dr. Merle Mason; Room 319 West Medical Building, Sat., Mar. 26, 10:00 a.m. Mathematics Colloquium. Fri., March 25 (instead of Tues., March 22) at 4:10 p.m., in Room 3011 Angell Hall. Prof. E. J.McShane, of the University of Virginia, will speak on "Channel Spaces." Tea and Coffee at 3:45 in 3212 Angell Hall. Concerts St. Matthew Passion by Bach, will be performed at 8:00 p.m. Fri., March 25, in Hill Auditorium, by the University of Michigan Choir and Symphony Or- chestra, Maynard Klein, conducting; soloists include Harold Haugh, tenor, Philip Duey, baritone, Frances Greer, soprano, and Arlene Sollenberger, con- tralto, all members of the faculty of the School of Music. Student soloists: John Moser as Judas, James Berg as Peter, Donald Nelson as the High Priest, William Merrel as Pilate; Joan Marie Dudd, Pilate's wife; June Howe and Elizabeth Fischer, Maids. Marilyn Mason Brown will appear as organist, Phillip Steinhaus, harpsichordist, and Percival Price, carillonneur. The Chor- ale Choir from twenty-four Michigan High Schools will be conducted by James B. Wallace. Open to public. University Symphony Band, William D. Revelli, Conductor, will be heard in a public concert at 4:15 p.m. Sun., March 27, in Hill Auditorium. Bach's Prelude and Fugue in G minor; Jubilee from "Symphonic Sketches" by Chad- wick; Concertino by Vidal; "La Fiesta El Mexicana" by Reed; Paul Creston's Overture, "Celebration," Leidzen's Dox- ology; Pierne's Deux Conversations and Bozza's Nuages, with the saxophone quartet of students Doris Anderson, Elaine Wright, Janet Wirth and Fred Becker; Howard Hanson's Chorale "Al- leluia" and the Michigan Rhapsodie, ar- ranged by Werle. Open to the public without charge. Student Recital. Carol Leybourn Ken- ney, pianist, willpresent a program in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music at 8:30 p.m. Sun., March 27, in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. A pupil of Marian Owen, Mrs. Kenney will play compositions by Bach, Schubert, Beethoven, and Ravel. Open to the public. Events Today "The Skin of Our Teeth," Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning come- dy, will be presented by the Depart- ment of Speech at 8:00 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets are on sale at the box office 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Weekly Coffee (and tea) Hour will be held in Lane Hall Library. Fri., Mar. 25 Episcopal Student Foundation. Break- fast at Canterbury House following the 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion Fri., March 25, Annunciation. Canterbury Coffee Clatch, 4:00 to 5:15 p.m., Fri., March 25, at 5:15 p.m., in the Chapel of St. Michael and All Angels. Canterbury Campus Series: The Right Rev. Richard S. Emrich, Bishop of Michigan, discuss- ing "A Christian Faces Death," third speaker of the Lenten Series on "Chris- tianity and Evil," at 7:30 p.m., Fri., March 25, at Canterbury House. Phi Bet' Kappa. Annual Meeting, Fri., March 25, 4:15 p.m. in Room 1408 Mason Hall. Election of new members. Members urged to attend. Congregational-Disciples Guild. Fri., Mar. 25, 10:15 p.m., Open House and re- freshments at the Guild House follow- ing the concert in Hill Auditorium. Note the change on your Guild calendar from 8:15 p.m. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club. Candlelight Vesper Service tonight at 11:00 p.m. at University Lutheran Chapel, to open weekend regional con- vention of Gamma Deltans. Sermon by the Rev. John Constable, adviser to the Ohio State Gamma Delta chapter. First Baptist Church. Fri., March 25. 7:15 p.m. Guild will attend St. Matthew Passion at Hill Auditorium-return to Guild House for refreshments. Wesleyan Guild. Fri., March 25 "Mad Hatter Party" with Lutherans in the lounge at 8:30 p.m. Lutheran Student Association. Fri., Mar. 25, 8:00 p.m. Joint party with the Wesley students at the First Methodist Church. Meet at the Center and go as a group. Mixers, square dancing and other entertainment. Corner of Hill St. and Forest Ave. Coming Events SRA Saturday Lunch. Rev. M. A. Thomas of the Mar Thoma Church in Travancore, India, and past chairman of the Ecumenical Commission of the World Student Christian Federation, will speak on "An Ecumenical Ambassa- dor Speaks to Students." 12:15m. Lane Hall. Reservations by Fri. Call NO 3- 1511, Ext. 2851. Frosh Weekend. Members of the Props and Set Committee, Maize Stage Crew and any Maize Team member interested in working on the Staging should meet Sat., Mar. 26. 10:00 a.m. in the Under- graduvate Office of the League. Square Dancing and Social Dancing at the SRA Party Sat., Mar. 26 from 8:00- 12:00 p.m. at Lane Hall. No admission charge. SRA "Summer Evening" at Lane Hall, Tues., March 29, at 8:15 p.m. to discuss summer study, travel, work projects. Call Grey Austin, Univ. Ext. 2851, if you would like a place in the program. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent and Faculty-conducted Evensong Sat., March 26, at 5:15 p.m., in the Chapel of St. Michael and All Angels. Bible seminars sponsored by the West- minster Student Fellowship in Room 217 of the Presbyterian Student Cen- ter at 9:15 and 10:45 a.m., Sun., March 27. Early discussion will be on the Gospel of St. John and the late sem- inar on St. Matthew. Undergraduate Math Club. Mon., Mar. 28, at 8:00 p.m. in Room 3-K of Michigan Union. Jerry Pavlik, "Some Applications of Quaternions to Number Theory." ANNUAL REPORT: Phoenix Project .Progress Cited Marked physical growth and increased research activity are rescribed in the annual progress report of the University's Memorial- Phoenix Project. To be dedicated June 9, 1955, the $1,500,000 Phoenix Labora- tory which is under construction on the new North Campus, has already sponsored 98 new research projects over a six-year span. Of the 98 projects, 27 have been concluded "each adding in- formation that increases our knowledge of the nature, the possi- bilities, or the limitations of atomic energy for peaceful purposes," the report says. Dedicated to War Dead The Phoenix Memorial is a program dedicated to University World War II dead and is devoted to the study of the beneficial uses of atomic energy. Although active solicitation of funds for the project ceased in 1953, after a campaign goal of $6,500,000 was ex- ceeded by almost a million dollars, contributions continue to come in, the report notes. It continues to point out that with its one-million watt nuclear reactor, the completed laboratory will provide facilities unequalled in the field of high-level radiation research. The reactor will be the most powerful research installation outside the Atomic Energy Com- mission. Ten million neutrons will be produced, during the reactor's op- eration, in a square centimeter of the reactor's enriched uranium fuel supply. Basic building blocks of the atom, they will be invalu- able in a wide range of fundamental scientific and engineering ex- periments. Varied Research Projects Research of the Phoenix Project ranges from the legal and social implications of atomic energy to its uses in medical therapy, in the preservation of food and sterilization of materials, and as an invaluable "tracer" that reveals the functions of living cells and the structure of matter. Research activity outlined in the report includes one of poten- tial importance in the production of large amounts of polio virus needed for vaccine purposes. It deals with the sterilization by gamma radiation of tissue culture fluids, the medium in which the virus is grown. The process provides complete, rapid sterilization of the fluid, allowing the virus to grow >>.; mesmm swith contamination, ROGER L. LEATHERMAN, assistant to the director of the Phoenix Project, inspects tb sit area where construction will soon begin on the nuclear reactor to be joined to the nearly-cort ipleted Phoenix Memorial Laboratory. DAILY PHOTO FEATU RE STORY by Gail Goldstein PICTURES Courtesy of University News Service A continuing major interest of both the health sciences and bIo- logical sciences, is the effect of radiation on living systems, a s).b- ject which is of concern to every- one. Investigations are in progress in this area coverning many liv- ing organisms, including animals, plants, parasites, bacteria, and viruses.4 Includes Five Laboratories These few projects and many others are touched upon in the re- port as well as the work of five laboratories assisted or supported by the Phoenix Project. These are the Alice Crocker Lloyd Memorial Isotope Research Laboratory, the Alice Croocker Lloyd Radiation Therapy Center, the Phoenix Radioisotope Laboratory, the Plant Nutrition Laboratory, and the Phoenix Radiocarbon Dating Lkb- oratory. The project is directed by Dean Ralph A. Sawyer, of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Assistant Director is Prof. Henry J. Gomberg, of the electri- cal engineering department Roger L Leatherman is assistant to'the director. ---------------------------------------- I 6 PROF. HENRY . GOMBERG, left, assistant director of the project, looks on as Dean Ralph A. Sawyer, director, points out the proposed reactor on a ni -del of the reactor and the Memorial Laboratory. A Campus-to-Career Case History "This is what I did yesterday" 1 r r M M r t N 1 r r r r r A r R r r A M 1 r M 1 M N 1 r R M r M 1 M M r M t M B I t r r e r r r r M 0 I t r r N e, r M 1 N 1 1 M FOURTEEN FEET of water shield a technician from the intense radiation of the Phoenix Project] Cobalt 60 source, the most powerful non-government source of its kind. MASSIVE CHAMBERS will house research experiments witk powerful sources of radioactivity. "I like a job that keeps me jumping," says Bill Jermain, C.E. from Marquette, '52. "And my first management assign- ment with Wisconsin Telephone Com- pany does just that. I'm Service Foreman at Sheboygan, with nine install- ers, and that means variety of responsi- bility. But judge for yourself. Here's a quick run-down of what I did yester- day, on a typical day- 8:10-"Checked day's work schedule. One of my new men was putting in a buried service wire, and I went over the job specs with him to be sure he had things straight. 8:30-"Answered mail while my clerk checked time sheets from previous day. 9:30-"Out to supervise installation of the first aluminum Outdoor Telephone Booth in my exchange. Reviewed the assembly instructions with the installers, then arranged for special tools and bolts to be delivered to the job. 11:30-"Drove across town. Made a complete 'quality inspection' on a tele- phone we installed last week. Everything checked O.K. 12:00-"Lunch. 1:00-"Picked up film for next day's safety meeting. Watched the film, made notes for discussion. 2:00-"Met with moving company manager to estimate cost of telephone cable lifting for a house moving job. Drove the route he had planned and worked out schedule for construction crews. 3:30-"Returned to aluminum booth in- stallation. Went over wiring specs with the electrician. 4:00-"Stopped at Central Office to pick up next day's orders. Met installers at garage as they checked in and assigned next day's work." 1 I :. ,... r{.U . ...}J :}.;. 4 :::i:v ..':r.ii: .} ';