rMmav A "!TAR1i! '1A3 lL THE MICMIGAN DAILY PACK' a 5IN i~ U1 11i11 i6I iJfh..L ". -.-.." ..9AW Medical Man Cites Needs "Words as well as hands make the surgeon." Pref. Frederick A. Coller, chief of surgery in the School of Medi- cine, said recently that a surgeon needs a clear head as well as good hands to be successful. In Prof. Coller's opinion, every young man or woman who aspires to be a doctor or surgeon should learn how to speak and write the English language effectively and accurately. Collect More Than Facts Surgeons cannot operate on pa- tients and then analyze the situa- tion, he commented. "Surgeons, like detectives, do more than col- lect facts - they have to make 'sense out of them," Prof, Coller said. More than manual dexterity is required of a good surgeon, he continued. "This business of sing- ling out a surgeon by his long, firm fingers is a myth," Prof. Col- ler added. "You've got to look at the whole man, because only in that way can you have any idea what kind of mind he has." Prof. Coller advises college stu- dents not to hide behind technical scientific terms . "Don't forget the accurate selection of a simple word is often the best way of making sense," he asserted. "You may be able to tie a square knot in a piece of piano wire behind your back blindfold- ed," Prof. Coller said. "However, this won't make you a good sur- geon," he concluded, GETS UNUSUAL REQUESTS: Catalog Office Records Alumni News University Plans To Host State UNESCO Meeting By MARY ANN THOMAS I Want some information? Do you want to locate an old friend, verify your birth date, know if your old girlfriend is married? Or perhaps you want to know if your uncle attended the University. Answers to these questions and many others may be found at the University's Alumni Catalog Of- fice, located in the basement of Alumni Memorial Hall. Keeps 165,000 Names Supervised by Helen L. Schmutz, the Catalog Office has names and current addresses of 165,000 living Michigan alumni now scattered around the world, plus' those of current students and innumerable deceased alumni. Organized'to keep a record of current addresses of all Michigan alums, the Catalog Office places one section of each student's "rail- road ticket" in a large master file. On this card is the student's name, address, school and gradu- ation date, his parents' name and names of two friends. Trace Lost Addresses The main problem is to keep alumni addresses up to date. Members of the 14 women office staff are continually working at the master file changing addres- ses or locating addresses for var ious organizations. When an address is lost or the alumnus has moved, the Catalog Office has to find his new add- ress. It is then that names on the The annual fall conference and' meeting of the Michigan Council for UNESCO will be hel4 here Fri- day and Saturday. Open to the public, the confer- ence will feature speeches by noted persons in the fields of sociology and' education. Headquarters for the conference will be the Rack- ham Bldg. Program for the meeting will include the opening assembly pre- sided over by Prof. Loraine V. Shepard of Michigan State Uni- versity's education department. Also on the program will be five group discussions to explore var- ious problems in international education and understanding and several films concerning UNESCO. Prof. Stowe will address the as- sembly, on "America Confronted with Moscow's New World Policy" during the dinner Friday. Registration for the two-day conference will open at 12:30 p.m. Friday in the foyer of Rackham Bldg. 'U' To Resume TV Schedule The University will resume its schedule of eight weekly programs over WPAG-TV tomorrow. Programs, produced by the De- partment of Speech and the Tele- vision office, include "Storytime", "Dateline Ann Arbor", "Close Up", and "Studio Sampler." Hire the Handicapped Week will be marked by the "Close-Up" pro- gram at 8:00 tomorrow, featuring interviews with Viola Stein and Bill Gasper. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 'he BROWN JUG 'e taurat t SPAGHETTI AND MEALS OUR SPECIALTY 1204 South University 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. Daily Except Saturday ' ,'{. i -Daly-Sam Ching STAFF KEEPS ALUMNI ADDRESSES UP-TO-DATE ".S SPECIA4L SELLING, SWERTERS. ZEPHER WOOL by Hogg of Hawick made in Scotland . BMW", at, Fischer' .... You may select your favorite fragrance or cosmetic from- FABERGE' - EVYAN DANA LENTHERIC -GUERLAIN - CARON YARDLEY -CORDAY -CI RO LUCIEN LeLONG SCHIAPARELLI - REVLON - TUSSY DOROTHY GRAY- MILKMAID MAX FACTOR "railroad ticket" come in handy. The Office writes the parents or the- friends for the new address. The staff may consult more than 250 telephone directories for addresses. Current directories from all Michigan cities, main cities in the United States, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Montreal and Toronto, Canada, are also in the Catalog Office. Alums In Biographical File After a studeit graduates a folder about him is placed in a huge biography file. Information about him from the Registrar's Office, such as election cards, high school applications to the University, andhtranscripts, is then placed in these files. Subscribing to a newspaper clipping service, the Catalog Of- five then puts news articles and wedding announcements of alum- ni in these folders. Pertinent information on de- ceased alumni is kept in a sep- erate file. Gets Unusual Requests As can be expected with a job like this, the Catalog Office re- ceives many unusual requests. Last summer the staff was stumped when a person called in asking for names of all the fraternity mas- cots on campus. However, not all requests are so difficult to answer. A Chinese Loyalty CHARLOTTE, MICH. (P) - Karl J. LalI, a Jackson engin- eer, holds some kind of long distance record for getting hair- cuts. Every two weeks for more than 39 years he has traveled 75 miles to get his ears lowered at the barbershop of Don Marsh in Charlotte. Lall makes the trip because Marsh befriended him when Lall was working his way as a youth through a correspond- ence school course in drafting. student had heard that her grand- father had once attended the Uni- versity so she inquired at the Catalog Office. Sure enough, his name was on file along with in- formation that he was one of the first Chinese students to study at Michigan. Recently a medical student pre- sented another strange problem; he needed proof that he had grad- uated from high school. The Of- fice was able to verify this because of the information in the student's file. Realizing that one section of the "railroad ticket" can be of such value makes the job of filling them out every semester much less tedious, don't you think? 1 short sleeve pull-overs were cardigans were $10.95 I special $700 sizes 34 to 40 ,. ,.5 r, ::.r.. F' : ' >1 :4{; :h $7.95 special $500 EIi C~LJmI~I ~ iiety , a mat.dr 4 'f ~:., A . ..,, .. :: ..:. - >:>:: r:;:: r>' '. r .. ::.::. r :{ ::::. :.... r. and For Men Too - SPORTSMAN -- OLD SPICE - "HIS" LENTHERIC - YARDLEY KINGS MEN - FABERGE' COURTLEY The Casual Look, Precisely Defined in CorntryT Clot-hes by Isn't this what Country Clothes should mean? Tailoring close to perfectiori .. . so right for the life you lead ... made for the campus! And they sell at such piggy-bank prices. v . .,: LIBERTY at FIFTH Open a A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily Sunday Hours: 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.-5 P.M. to 9 P.M. 4 ," .. NEW SHIPMENTS of USED TEXTBOOKS arriving daily! NEW BOOKS IF YOU PREFER For that hard-to find textbook try FO, 322 South State ELET T'S MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE BOB GRAHAM, Mgr. GENERATION MAGAZINE is now accepting C ONTRIBUITIONS Left, "Snapper" sport coat in all wool Melton with brass snaps on black calf. Camel, red, black. 8 to 16. 39.95 Matching skirt with key chain. 14.95 Center, Wing-collared dickey-front shirt in exclusive' cotton check. 7.95 Doeskin flannel narrow arrow skirt in black, wine, camel, Delft blue. 14.95 Right, Imported cotton stripe, Italian collared. Camel, Delft, Birch Red. 7.95 Matching beautifully shaped gabardine skirt, contour belt. 10 to 18. 17.95