TIDE MICHIGAN DAILYTU eOCKWELL: coed Student Enters 'U' in 1870 Mayor Urges Students To Attend OpenHouse SPECIAL CY REIK arch of a higher led on the doors of in vain for many y were allowed tol of Regents of allowing e r equi - pective it was 1870, to her entrance end of her family, "The die is cast, over and we have the University." :. L, D'Ooge, said xt Monday I un- young lady will will seat her, as tically. I expect tlemen." t, lunch with the ,"I'lltry to be a '11 not sit beside this very student victions, married coed of the University. She had prepared in Latin and Greek at Kalamazoo College under the tute- lage of Mrs. L. H. Stone, the wife Salesmen' The University's Survey Re- search Center will study how life insurance salesmen view their work and contributes to their suc- cess in business. An $11,000 grant from the Mil- lion Dollar Round Table will ,f- nance the research this fall. Approximately 200 experienced underwriters will be interviewed. as to their relations with cients, organizational services, sources of information, and feeling about the insurance business. An improved system of selecting and training insurance salesmen is the goal of the Survey Research Center. The Million Dollar Round Table; is a national honorary group of approximately 2,500 underwriters! who sell $1 million or more of life, insurance annually. of one of the professors of the college. Before she was allowed to enter, she was given a more severe en- trance examination than was nor- mally given to entering freshmen. Although she was the first wom- an to enter, Miss Stockwell was not the first to receive a degree from the University. In 1871, Amanda Sanford obtained her de- gree, and Sarah Kilgore received a Bachelor of Laws. Became a Teacher After her graduation, Miss Stockwell was a teacher of art at Kalamazoo College and . partici- pated in many civic organizations such as the Women's Literary Club in Kalamazoo. For 'the last forty years, until her death in 1924, Madelon Stock- well Turner dropped-out of notice. Secluding herself in her house, her neighbors knew that she was still alive only because the food they placed at her door each day disappeared. One day it did not disappear and she was found dead, ending a life of pioneering for women's rights. In her will, she established a loan fund for women in the liter- ary college. -Daily-Aarold Gassenheimer PROF. W. M. HARE .. philosopher Hare Delivers Lec ture at cLU' On Philosophy, Prof. Richard M. Hare spoke yesterday on the topic of ",Doing What One Thinks One Caught Not To Be Doing." Prof. Hare is presently a visiting lecturer at Princeton University. He is a member of the faculty at Oxford University in England. His lecture was delivered under the' auspices of the University's department of philosophy. Ann Arbor's Mayor, Prof. Samuel J. Eldersveld of the political sci- ence department, yesterday urged students and residents to attend the city's Open House, Dec. 5, 6 and 7. School pupil groups will be in- vited for Dec. 5 and 6, with the public at large attending all day Dec. 6 and the morning of Dec. 7. Guided tours of city offices and facilities and a reception on Dec. 6 will be included in the .Open House. Mayor Eldersveld issued a state- ment in which he said, "It's not a unique idea that government should be close to the people. In fact, this expression has become so commonplace as to be ignored at times. "But we ignore it at our peril. It is a most worthwhile concept in my estimation, and on this idea we must rely greatly if we are to be successful in pushing ahead with our program of forwarding Ann Arbor. "A lot of work is being done so that you can see how your govern- ment, the government you elect and for which you pay, actually works.' "I promise. that you will learn a lot, you will ind much of interest and value and import at our open house," the mayor's statement continued. "Ann Arbor has a tradition of an alert and informed citizenry. As a person active in local political affairs, I have known for a long time this was not as true as it should be. Since serving as your mayor, I have found anew that there is not enough-not nearly enough-interest and concern for city problems." WJR Ap ts Grad to Staff John Schubeck, Jr., Grad, has been appointed to the WJR news staff, according to Worth Kramer, Executive Vice-President and Gen- eral Manager of WJR. Schubeck's appointment will be- come effective Sunday. He served four and one-half years on the newsstaff of radio station WUOM at the University. He will broadcast the 11 p.m. and 12 midnight news on Satur- days and the Sunday news pro- grams. Chemistry & Physics~ N H andbook 38th EDITION Regularly 9.00 Now Only limited quantity Ulrich's Book Store SALE Subscribe to The Michigan Dai red - well equipped role as first U ".a... DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN w. r spig 1! SI 4 U ,.-, C ' TODAY! .ued from Page 4) vernment Council will .m., Nov. 26, 1957 in the ties Building. rs during Thanksgiving General Libi'ary and all ries will be closed on' ksgiving Day. The Gen- nd divisional libraries, tion of the Medical Li- closed. Sat., Nov. 30. e n'o Sunday Service on in the Medical Library. Library will be open on and on Fri.; Nov. 29, 6 p.m. All units within ill be open on th'eir reg- Fri., with the exception ;e Reading Rooms which a.m.-12m., 1-5 p.m., and which will be closed. Lbraries will be closed Most of the divisional Ii-- open on short schedules ) Schedules will be post- s. Phone Ext. 3184 for in-. avian Seminar for Cul- s offering a year's study rorway, Sweden, or Den- essional people with an .ation, college graduates, uates who wish to spend ar abroad. Students will dinavian families while uainted with the lan- itoms of the country and id 22 weeks at one of colleges in - the coun- f study for the year, in- is approximately $1500; cholarships and scholar- ship loans will be given in 1958-59. The deadline for applying is April 1, 1958 although applications received before Jan. 1, 1958 will be given priority. Ad- mission applications and more informa- tion may be obtained in the Office of the Graduate School. Student Government Council: Sum- mary of action taken at its meeting on Nov. 22, 1957. Appointed: Dan Belin to serve as SGC representative to,the Panhellenic- Assembly Rushing Study Committee.' Elected the following officers: , President: John J. Collins Exec. Vice-President: Ronald Shorr Adm. Vice-President: Maynard Goldman Treasurer: Scott; Chrysler The Institute of International Edu- cation has announced foreign study grants available for the year 1958-59. Awards will be granted to the following countries: Austria, Brazil, Cuba, Den-' mark, England, France, Germany, Iran, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden' and Switzerland. Student may apply for Fulbright Travel Grants (travel only) in conjunction with some of these awards. Students in the fields of phys- ics, chemistry, mathematics, and met- allurgy will be considered for supple- mentary grants-in-aid if they are suc- cessful in the competitions for the. various awards. The deadline for apply- ing for most of the awards is Jan. 15, 1958. Further information about these, grants may be obtained in the Office of the Graduate School. - Lectures Lecture. "The Solar Corona and the Interplanetary Gas," by Prof. Sydney Chapman, International President of the Special Committee for the Interna- tional Geophysical Year, Tues., Nov. 26, at 4:00 p.m., in Aud. C, Angell Hall. Third and final lecture in the series "Soviet Union and Eastern Europe" en- titled "Recent Travelers' Reports on Poland," at 8 P.M. Tues., (Nov. 26) in Aud. B, Angell Hall. Chairman will be Prof. William B. Ballis, of the Depart- ment of Political Science, and the fol- lowing speakers: Prof. James O. Ferrell, of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures; Prof. Edmund Ordon, of the wayne State University Slavic department; Father Peszkowski, Polish priest now at St. Mary's Seminary, Or- chard Lake, Mich., and Prof. John W. Addison, Jr., of the Department of Mathematics. cad emic Notices Mathematics Colloquium: Tues., Nov. 26 at 4:10 p.m. in Room 3011, A.H. Da- vid S. Greenstein will speak on "Deri- vatives, Translates, and Moments." Tea and coffee at 3:45 in Room 3212, A.H. (Commons Room). Doctoral Examination for Alfred Merle Beeton, Zoology; thesis: "The Vertical Migration of Mysis relicta in Lakes-Hu- ron and Michigan," Tues., Nov. 26, West Council Room, Rackham Building, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, D. C. Chandler. Doctoral Examination for Bernard Alter Landes, Speech; thesis: "Recruit- ment Measured by Automatic Audiom- etry,'" Wed., Nov. 27, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 1:15 p.m. Co-chair- men, George Herman and Merle Law- rence: FOREIGN VISITORS The following foreign visitors will be on the campus this week on the dates indicated. Program arrangements are being made by the International Cen- ter: Mrs. Miller. Mr. AtaollahrKhadem, Concertmaster, Teheran Symphony Orch., teacher of violin, Cons. of Teheran, Iran, Nov. 26 Program arrangements are being made by Regent Eugene B. Power: Mr. Abd El Aziz Taha: Head Photo- graphic Dept., National Research Cen- ter of Egypt, Egypt, Nov. 18-28. Program arrangements are being made by the Radiology Dept.: Dr. I. Lampe: i Dr. Amiro Tamara Merlano: Radiolo- gist, Hospital Barranquilla, Hospital In- fantil, Clinica Bautista, Instituto de Ra- diologia, Barranquilla, Colombia, Col-" ombia, Nov. 25-29. Placement Notices Free nnies of "Career-195R" will be distributed to seniors and graduate students in the lobbies of the East and West Engineering Buildings Mon.-Wed., Nov. 25-27. The following school will be at the Bureau of Appointments on Mon., Dec. 2 to interview for Feb., 1958. Battle Creek, Michigan (Springfield Schools) - Elementary, Kindergarten through 6th grade. (Will also talk to secondary candidates interested in this area).I For any additional information and appointments, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration. Building, NO. 3-1511, Ext. 489. Please Note: Appointments should be made by 4 p.m. of the day prior to the scheduled interview. Companies. check their schedule the day before their in- terviews and if there are not a suffi- cient number of students they very oft- en cancel their schedule. If you are in- terested in a company on this list and have the necessary qualifications, eith- er call or stop into the office for an appointment. Literature is usually available for these companies. Personnel Interviews: Representatives from the followingj will be at the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., ext. 3371. Mon., Nov. 25 The Firestone Tire and Rubber Com- pany, Akron, Ohio. Graduates - Febru- ary, June, August. Location of work -- Akron, Ohio; Memphis, Tenn.; Potts- town, Pa.; Los Angeles, Calif.; Fall Riv- er, Mass.; Des Moines, Ia.; Gastonia, N. C.; Bennettsville, S. C., Wyandotte, Mich.; New Bedford, Mass.; Noblesville, Ind.; New Castle, Ind.; Hamilton, On- tario; Valencia, Venezuela; Christ- church, New Zealand; Port Elizabeth, South Africa; Bombay, India; Ham- burg, Germany; Buenos Aires, Argen- tina; ! Sao Paulo, Brazil; Pratteln, Switzerland; Viskafors, Sweden; Bilbao, Spgin. Manufactures tires, tubes, and industrial rubber products; synthetic rubbers, lattices, plastics, steel prod- ucts, including steel rims for trucks, buses, and tractors: and various stain- less steel products, Men with' B.A. in Liberal Artsr'or Business Administration for Sales, Acctg., Credit, and Retread Shop. Men are placed in Company op- erated retail sales, office and credit or commercial account selling positions. Good opportunities to grow into store management or dealer selling assign- ments. Tues., Nov. 26 Internatiohal Business Machines Cor- poration, Dearborn, Michigan. Gradu- ates - February,' June, August. Loca- tion of work - Detroit and State of Michigan. Manufacture of office equip- ment, electric typewriters, time signal- ling and recording equipment, electron- le accounting machines, and electronic calculators. Men with BA in Liberal Arts or Business Administration for Sales in the Data Processing Division, or Systems Analysts in the Data Pro- cessing Division. Women with BA in Liberal Arts, Business Administration or Education for Service Systems Rep- resentatives to work with salesmen and customers for training in the Data Pro- cessing Division. Wed., Nov. 27 Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada- Men in LS&A or BusAd for Sales. Com- pany has over $7 billion Life Insurance in force operating in 23 countries. Wed,, Dec. 4 Central Intelligence Agency, Wash- ington, D.C. Graduates - February. Location of Work -- Washington, D.C. Men & Women with M.A. or Ph.D. in Economics or Political Science, M.A. or Ph.D. in International Relatiotis or Area Studies, B.A. or M.A. in Statistics, M,S. or Ph.D. in Chemistry or Physics. B.S.; M.S. or Ph.D. in Engineering, BBA or M.B.A. in Accounting for work with Central Intelligence Agency Prefer- ence is given to students in the upper quarter of their class who are in good health and are willing to travel. For some positions veterans are desired: for all, U.S. citizenship is a requisite. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Bxt. 3371. Cutler-Hammer Inc., Milwaukee, Wis., needs a Feb. grad. with an MBA in Marketing for a Market Research po- sition. Arthur D. Little, Inc., Cambridge, Mass. is looking for an Operations Re- search man with a Ph.D. in Physics, Chem., Math. or related fields, a Physi- cist-with a Physics Ph.D. and an Acous- tical Engrs. Pontiac Camp Fire Girls has an open- ing for a Field Director with a degree in Phys. Ed., Ed., Rec., Psyc, Soc. Work or related fields. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., ext. 3371. Special Notice: An invitation is extended to students from the Chicago area who might be home at Christmas to visit the First National Bank of Chicago. Any students interested in any phase of banking are welcomed. The day of the visit will in- clude. a tour of the bank and discus- signs with its staff. Names must be in by Dec. 1. Interested persons are re- quested to contact the Bureau of Ap- pointments befdre that date. Purchase your 1958 Michiganensian at two convenient locations: the DIAG and the ENGINE ARCH beten .. and, 4 P.M. PRICE RISE ... FRIDAY, DEC. 13 3 Pking for something,' diffe rent?. Ve carry imported frames from France, Germany and Italy in addition to our American styles. - OCCULIST PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CAMPUS OPTICIANS Nickels Arcade Dial NO 2-9116 rl '11 "1 1'' 40 ' x ,. \ / - a"AGG liVjll4.7 LS VWi GGi 1JVV YY 321 N4 1 .i I 0 S 0, TRY Varsity- "FALL DRY"~ Laundry Service 6 POUNDS OF LAUNDRY Washed, Dried, Folded $1 OO Only 1 Ic each added POUND Ali of your LaUNDRY, white and colors, clothing and flat work, or just clothing ...,'..' , .'......'.1'....." WE'RE COMING TO BANDIT GULCH- THE MOST DANGEROUS PART! STIFF UPPER - LIP! if ffi " 1J y w T, ee °'s 9ja . :, " !.' . rijm I . _ . ! IS IS A COTTON-PICKIN' . a<' OUTRAGE! ROUTINE CRECK OLD BOY. LET'S R-AVE YOUR DRIVER'S LICENSE ...AND A CIGARETTE1 DESIST FROM YOUR::::.::<;.::":.:.:.:.:.::L::. . 1:. LIFE OF CRIME, ... Utoe A CIGARETTE 8EG You NEW WINSMN SHOULD! Y., :::": Y .: TASTES "f: Jf . t :.::::..:.':..:: .. 1 . n ....... '{a+' " ....... -' M" i, . A.:i:7[ji[ a::S r: j'?"'.Abr: c :' r' _. 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