FOUR
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
SATURDAY-Al
U' Public
ealth Group
To Give BS
Offer Undergrad
Program Now
The School of Public Health has
announced that undergraduate
programs toward Bachelor of Sci-
ence degrees will be offered by the
school for the first time this fall.
The programs to be offered will
be in the fields of health adminis-
tration and sanitary science. All
previous work, with the exception
Qf the nurse's program, had been
only on the graduate level.
Students participating in the
new program, which is designed to
provide a broad background in the
social and physical sciences as well
as public health, will require the
use of facilities of the Literary
College and Business Administra-
tion and Medical Schools.
"The health administration pro-
gram will qualify students for car-
eers as non-medical administra-
tors in a new and expanding field
of service, Dean Henry F. Vaughan
explained.
"Beginning with the local health
department and continuing on up
to the state and national health
service programs, each expansion
of the health services has made
the need for professionally pre-
.pared administrative personnel
more apparent," he said.
The present widespread expan-
sion of health services administer-
ed by non-governmental or vol-
tintary agencies, such as indus-
lies, labor groups and Blue Cross
and Blue Shield, also is creating
additional need for trained admin-
iftrative personnel, the d e a n
pointed out.
The curriculum in sanitary sci-
ence is intended to prepare pro-
tessional personnel for one of the
long-established fields of public
health whose important social
significance necessitates a broad
education in the social and natur-
al sciences, Dean Vaughan said.
In order to be admitted to either
of the new programs a student will
have to have satisfactorily com-
pleted at least 60 hours of work in
required and elective courses, with
an honor point average-of 2.5.
Art Offered
For Memorial
Dean Avard Fairbanks, a former
University professor, has volun-
teered his services as a sculptor-
without cost-to construct a mon-
ument honoring Claude Wyman,
the late Burns Park groundskeep-
er.
The Claude Wyman memorial
ias been supported by many of the
young people who frequent the
park, located next to Tappan Jun-
Ior High Schools on Wells St.
Dean Fairbanks, now at the
University of Utah, is recognized
is one of the country's foremost
sculptors.
'U' Student Gets
ChicagoAward
Virginia M. Walcott, '42, '48
Grad., of Ann Arbor, is one of the
five Michigan residents to receive
fellowships and scholarships at the
University of Chicago.
Miss Walcott, daughter of Prof.
Walcott of the education school,
will work toward a PhD. in English
on an Edith S. Keim memorial
fellowship.
Her award was one of 312 given
to students from 35 states and 11
foreign countries as part of the
University of Chicago's annual
program of aid for outstanding
students.
'U' Students Asked
To Save Volumes
The Inter - Fraternity Council
has requested University students
to save their textbooks and to sell
them at the IFC bookstore next
year, Bill MacIntyre, bookstore
editor, announced.
Higher prices for the books are
expected during the coming year,
he said. The bookstore will be in
the Union.
Buy and Sell Through
Daily Classifieds
Will Throw
'Beach Ball'
The summer social season will
officially close with the "Beach
Ball" informal dance, 9 p.m. to
Midnight, today, in the League.
Surrounded by ships, and sails,
and sea nets and serpents, Ken
Norman's orchestra will provide
music. Jim Ebersole will M.C.
* * *
THE DANCE is expected to
match the casualness of the sum-
mer session-before exams Thurs-
day.
Tickets for the dance, which is
sponsored by the Women's League
Council, are on sale at the League
desk and at the door.
Plymouth Press Foils Daily
Special to The Daily
PLYMOUTH-If the Daily does-
n't hit the streets-or the door-
steps by the accustomed time for
reading over coffee this week, be
patient.
Since the press was sold and re-
moved from the Student Publi-
cations Building to make room for
the new rotary next fall, the paper
has "gone to bed" each night here,
some 16 miles northeast of Ann
Arbor.
* *. *
THE ENTIRE publication sche-
dule has been upset by the new
and temporary setup.
First step in the new printing
system was to set the Daily's*
deadline up an hour, to mid-
night. Then the page forms
(pages filled with type) are
transported via University truck
to the plant of the Plymouth
Mail, a weekly newspaper, for
printing.
The Daily even brought its own
paper, which is hard to get, tot
Plymouth.
Pressmen Chester Jendrycha and
Al Duston of The Mail said that
the pxes didn't take to The Daily's
paper, and reacted quite strongly
by ripping it if it was run too fast.
* * *
SO, THEY explained, the press
had to run "extra slow," making
the press run about twice as long
as The Daily's normal run.
And after tomorrow morning
there will be no more need to be
patient-The Daily ceases publi-
cation then for the summer.
Fall publication will begin the
morning of Sept. 26.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
POCTIURE NEWS
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UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
- AND STUDENT CENTER
1511 Washtenaw Avenue-Phone 5560
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
Rev. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
9:30 A.M.: Bible Study.
10:30 A.M.: Service, with sermon by the pastor,
"Ungrudging Mercy-a Christian Duty."
5:30 P.M.: Lutheran Student Club Supper-Pro-
gram. Discussion, "Religious Terms and Their
Meaning."
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
120 South State Street
Dwight S. Large, Erland J. Wangdahl,
Joe A. Porter, Ministers
10:45 A.M.: Worship, "Sources of Samson's
Strength" Dr. Dwight S. Large, preaching.
5:30 P.M.: Student Supper and Social Hour.
6:30 P.M.: Vespers, "Christianity at Work in
the Wesleyan Guild." Reverend Joe A. Porter,
speaker.
Welcome to the Wesley Foundation-Open Daily.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Av.
W. P. Lemon and W. H. Henderson, Ministers
Harper Maybee, Director of Music
Mary Lown, Organist
10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Sermon by the
guest preacher, the Reverend Kenneth Neigh
of Detroit.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist
1833 Washtenaw Ave.
11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. a
Subject-Soul.
9:30 AM.: Sunday School. '
11:00 A.M.: Primary Sunday School during the
Morning Service.
8:00 P.M. Wednesday: Testimonial Services.
A free reading room is maintained at 339 South
Main Street where the Bible and all authorized
Christian Science literature may be read, bor-
rowed, or purchased.
This room is open daily, except Sundays and
holidays, from 11:30 A.M. to 5 P.M.
ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
No. Division at Catherine
8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion.
9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion (followed by Stu-
dent Breakfast, Canterbury House) .
11:00 A.M.: Summer Church School (thru 3rd
Grade only).
11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer. Sermon by the Rev.
Henry Lewis, S.T.D.
12:15 P.M.: After-Service Fellowship, Canterbury
House.
4:30 P.M.: Canterbury Club Picnic. The Rt.
Rev. Russell S. Hubbard will speak on "The
Theological Basis of Faith." Cars will leave
Canterbury House for Barton Hills promptly
at 4:30 P.M. Swimming.
8:00 P.M.: Evening Prayer.
Wednesday, 7:15 A.M.: Holy Communion (follow-
ed by Student Breakfast, Canterbury House).
Friday, 4:00 to 6:00 P.M.: Open House Tea,
Canterbury House.
M I D S U M M E R SKI-I U M P -Finn Karlson, of the
Norway Ski Club. takes off in the second annual Belknap Moun-
tain Midsummer Ski Tournament of Winnipesaukee Ski Club at
Laconia, N H. Seventy tons of crushed ice were sprayed on slope.
K E E P 1 N C T I M E - Oscar Duryea, 82-year-old dancing
master, checks a routine ofinstructors Barbara Crouse and Anne
Morrison at Dance Educators of America convention in New York.
I
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T H .E TEN C O M M A N DM E N T S ON A M O U N T A 1 N SI D E- Huge white stones spell out the Ten Com-
mandents at a shrine on the mountainside assembly grounds of the Church of God near Murphy, N. C. Each letter is taller than a man.
P R IN C E S S P R E S I D E S-Princess Irene of the Neth-
erlands lays cornerstone for a new church in London to replace
the Dutch Protestant Church destroyed by a land mine in 1940.
W I N NE R R E W A R D E D- Ken Fysh, of Berlin;NH.,
winner in, Midsummer ski meet at Laconia, N. H., receives trophy
from Betty Laurie, of Concord, "Miss New Hampshire of 1950."'
1.,
TEACH ERS
WANTED
for
Mich., Calif., Others
KINDERGARTEN
EL EMETARY
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