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July 13, 1954 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1954-07-13

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY,JUlY 13,1954

PAGE TWO

Urge Stress
Need within the teaching pro-
fession to stress teaching and
learning was pointed up by ans
educator here yesterday.
Speaking before the 25th Annual+
Summer Education Conference in
in Schorling Auditorium, Mark W.
Bills, superintendent of schools at
Kansas City, Mo., also asserted
there was need for a rebirth of the
idea of being of service to the
students as a means of lightening
the reliance on clinical techniques.
"In the vigor of our youth as a
profession we have become too
much concerned with clinical ad-
vance to the neglect of the love
and service of children." Super-
intendent Bills declared.
"We must balance our pride in
clinical advances with teaching
directed toward the humanizing of
the relations between student and
teacher," he said.
The Kansas City educator
claimed that teachying and learn-
ing have been largely displaced
by what is almost a jargon of
professional science until the lay-j
man is skeptical as to the services
education is trying to provide.
"Educator- have retreated into
a wilderness of organizational and
procedural mysteries and these
have been pushed into an import-
ance beyond the main business of
teaching and learning," he said.
"In particular," he said, "We
need to simplify the terminology
used to describe our teaching and
learning job. Too often it is dif-
ficult for the reader to tell whether
he is following a discussion of so-
cial theory, neo-humansim, or the
fruits of genuine scientific labor."
Warning against the dangers of
a shallow research, he .urged,"In
the dignity of a true profession let
us never take refuge behind the
findings of superficial research.
"Instead, let's check our basic
research carefully, and we may
find that some of the old educa-
tional procedures could serve us
well today."

Ann Arbor Fountain

DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS

MICHIGAN DAILY
Phone NO 23-24-1
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS
2 .60 1.34 1.96
3 .70 1.78 2.94
4 .90 2.24 3.92
Figure 5 average words to a line.
Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily.
11:00 A.M. Saturday
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-Horn-rimmed glasses July 8, be-
tween campus and Olivia. Call Bob
Griffith, NO 8-7683. 172A

FOR SALE
1951 CHEVROLET FLEETLINE-radio,
heater, low mileage. Phone NO 2-1793.
)551B
1948 TIP-CITY HOUSE TRAILER. 21
feet, clean, sturdy, roadable, furnish-
ed, $450. Call C. Drauner, NO 3-3601,
601 S. Main. )562B
Purchase from
Purchase
LEICA I-C with F 3.5 Elmar and
case. Like new. $80.
Purchase Camera

FOR SALE

NO 8-6987

1116 S. University
)534B

FOR SALE

-Daily-Marj Crozier
HEAT WAVE-As the mercury hit 94 degrees yesterday, some
figures on campus found it easy to keep cool as a cucumber. The
short heat wave is expected to break today with a high of 84.
WUONI Engineers Begin 'Signal
Strength Tests' in Twenty Cities

1950 DODGE Club Coupe, heater, new
rubber, low mileage, good condition.
Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washing-
ton, NO 2-4588. )568B
SUMMER STUDENT DIRECTORY on
sale all week from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
Student Publications Bldg. and all
the bookstores; and on the Diag from
9 a.m. to noon today only. Limited
number-50 cents. )564B
1950 FORD Custom-Six, black, 25,000
miles, sharp car. Huron Motor Sales,
222 W. Washington, NO 2.4588. )569B
GOOD USED FURNITURE, student
desks, miscellaneous items. Call NO
2-4391 after 6 p.m. )565B

1940 LaSALLE with V-8 Cadillac motor
in very good condition. Radio, heater,
good tires. Complete car for $75, motor
$50. Mechanics special. NO 2-9020.
)556B
1947 DODGE MOTOR in A-1 condi-
tion, $50; also 1947 Dodge radio $10.
Phone NO 2-9020 )557B
CONN-ALTO SAX, gold lacquer, good
condition, cheap. Also fine Pedler
clarinet, excellent condition. Must
sell. Call Diane or Russ AuWerter at
NO 2-0652 or NO 2-3241. )555B
CONTAX III A, brand new, sonnar 1.5
lens, built in light meter. Feet and
inches, case, filters. Make me an offer.
Must sell. Bill Koff at NO 3-3605 or
NO 3-1511, ext. 2820. )552B
1946 OLDSMOBILE, Club Coupe, radio
heater, hydramatic, one owner. Huron
Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO
2-4588. )549B
1947 WILLYS Station Wagon, recently
overhauled, good rubber. Huron Motor
Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588.
)550B

Your Friendly
Dodge Dealer
offers
Top Quality
Low Priced
Used Cars
SOME OF OUR
WEEKLY SPECIALS
1949 Buick Super
Radio, heater, Dynaflow, turn sig-
nals, good rubber, black finish.
$497
1951 Kaiser 2-dr.
Radio, heater, Hydra-Matic, a sharp
car.
$697
'53 Dodge, 4-dr.
Radio, heater, turn signals, gray
finish, excellent tires, low mileage.
$1495
Transportation Specials
1946 CHEVROLET four-door-Excel-
lent running condition.........$197
OPEN EVENINGS 'TILL 9
BENZ
THRIFTY USED CAR LOT
320 S. Fourth Ave. Phone NO 2-5523
YOUR DODGE-PLYMOUTH DEALER

FOR RENT
BY DAY OR WEEK-furnished 1 and 2
bedroom campus apartments. Rooms.
Families welcome. Campus Tourist
Homes. 518 E. Williams. NO 3-8454.
(near State). )92C
ROOMS FOR RENT
STUDIO APARTMENT, private entrance
and bath, combination living room
and sleeping room, kitchenette and
dining room, furnished. Call NO
2-4391 after 6 p.m. )102D
THREE LARGE ROOMS for male stu-
dents for summer. Single or double.
940 Greenwood. NO 8-9531. )97D
HELP WANTED
MAKEt$20 DAILY-sell luminous plates.
Write Reeves Co., Attleboro, Mass.
Free sample and details. )120H
SITUATION WANTED
MAN would like permanent caretaker
job-very dependable, has own trans-
portation. Wants to live out. Call
NO 2-9020. )3P
BUSINESS SERVICES
WASHING. Finished work and hand
ironing. Rough dry and wet wash-
ing. Also ironing separately. Free
pick-up and delivery. Phone NO
2-9020. Specialize in cotton dresses.
)581
ALTERATIONS- dressmaking, hems,
shirt collars turned. Call NO 3-3294.
)621
The most effective means of
reaching students and faculty of
The University is the advertising
columns of The Michigan Daily.

BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING -Reasonable rates, accurate
and efficient, done at home. Phone
NO 8-7590, 830 S. Main. )61I
RAD I O-PHONO-TV
Service and Sales
Free Pick-up and Delivery
Fast Service - Reasonable Rates
ANN ARBOR RADIO AND TV
"Student Service"
1% blocks east of East Eng. ')*
PERSONAL
HAIR REMOVED -- NEVER GROWS
BACK. From face and body by SHORT
WAVE METHOD. Ann Arbor physi-
cians' references. Lucia Gagalis, Vogue
Beauty Solon, Phone NO 8-8384. )121P
MAGAZINES at special, low student
rates. Phone Student Periodical Agen-
cy, NO 2-3061. )126P

jI

Engineers of the University ra-
dio station WUOM(FM) yesterday
began a series of "signal-strength
tests" to be made in over twenty
cities throughout s o u t h eastern
Michigan.
Chief engineer J. J. Swantek who
is conducting the tests says the
project, designed to measure the
strength of WUOM in terms of
microvolts-per-meter, is the first
to be made since the station of-

ficially began broadcasting in 1947.
Purpose of the tests is to deter-
mine how the station's main
transmitter, a 400-foot tower south
of Portage Lake, is functioning.
Using a trailer rig with a self-
contained generator and a collaps-
ible 20-foot antenna, Swantek and
studio engineer Dean Coston will
take ten-minute test measurements
at a number of random locations
within each city.

1953 WILLYS 4-door, with radio, heat-
er, overdrive. 16,000 miles. Good vaca-
tion car. Huron Motor Sales. 222 W.
Washington. NO 2-4588. )560B
BIG SAVINGS-Men's short sleeve sports
shirts. Seersuckers, skip dents. $1.59,
2 for $3. Sam's Store, 122 E. Wash-
ington. )559B

Nye Motor Sales,
INC.
210 W. Washington
Phones NO 3-4156,
NO 3-4858, NO 8-9757

f

I

DAI'LY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

f,
{'

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 3510
Administration Building before 3 p.m.
the day preceding publication.
TUESDAY, JULY 13, 19%
VOL. LXIV, No. 16S
Notices
Preliminary Examinations in English:
Applicants for the Ph.D. in English who
expect to take the preliminary exami-
nation this summer are requested to
leave their names with Dr. Ogden, 1634
Haven Hall. The examinations will be
given as follows: English Literature
from the Beginnings to 1550, Tuesday,
July 20; English Ltierature, 1550-1750,
Friday, July 23; English Literature, 1750-
1950, Tuesday, July 27; and American
Literature, Friday, July 30. The exami-
nations will be given in Room 2435,
Mason Hall, from 2 to 5 p.m.
The Department of Romance Lan-
guages of the University of Michigan is
very happy to announce thathProfes-
sor Kenneth Mildenberger of the Mod-
ern Language Association will be on
campus July 15 as a special consultant
in the Program for Teachers of French
and Spanish. He will give an address
on "The Renaissance in Language
Learning" at 3:30 p.m. In 439 Mason Hall.
All interested are invited.
Professor Mildenberger has achieved
national renown for his brilliant work
in directing the Foreign Language Pro-
gram of the Modern Language Associa-
tion. This Program, backed by funds
from the Rockefeller Foundation, is a
three-year study of the entire field of
foreign language teaching in the Unit-
ed States; it is now at the half-way
mark and has already established the
central office of the MLA as the head-
quarters for the renaissance in language
learning on which Professor Mildenber-
ger will speak. By his training and his
present position he is undoubtedly the
foremost authority in the country on
this topic.
z Nw

Cercle Francais: The Summer Session
Cercle Francais will meet weekly on
Wednesday evening at 8:00 through the
month of July, in the Michigan League.
A varied program of music, talk, games,
and discussions is planned. These meet-
ings are open to all students and resi-
dents of Ann Arbor who are interested
in France and things French. No prev-
ious membership is necessary. All are
welcome. Consult the League bulletin'
and the Daily for place, details, indi-
vidual programs.
La Petite Causette: An informal
French conversation group will meet
weekly through July in the Round-Up
Room of the League, Thursdays at 3:30.
A faculty member and a native French
assistant will be present but there is no
formal program. Refreshments are avail-
able nearby, and all persons interested
in talking and hearing French are cor-
dially invited to come.
Free Art Classes will be held for the
-following four Saturdays at 10 o'clock.
The work will be out-of-doors in sketch-
ing, painting in oils, water colors, and
pastels. All those desirous of entering
must register at Wahr's Book Store on
Wednesday, July 14. The work is offer-
ed by Margaret Dorman, a graduate
of the University in the field of Fine

Arts. At the end of the session there
will be an exhibition of the work done.
PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS
The Canada Life Assurance Co. will be
at the Bureau of Appointments on Tues-
day, July 13, to interview August gra-
duates in Bus.Ad. or LS&A for positions
in life insurance sales. Students inter-
ested in scheduling appointments may
contact the Bureau at 3528 Administra-
tion Bldg., Ext. 371.
PERSONNEL REQUESTS
J. I Case Co., Racine, Wisc., has op-
portunities available for recent or Aug-
ust.graduates in Sales, Industrial Man-
agement, Product Design and Develop-
ment Engineering.
The City of Hamilton, Ohio, is re-
ceiving applications for Engineering
Aide IV, Salary Range $4560-$5760, until
August 15, 1954. Registered or graduate
Civil Engineers are eligible to apply.
A Firm in the Ann Arbor Vicinity is
looking for an experienced Secretary.
Knowledge of typing and shorthand is
required.
For additional information concerning
these and other employment opportuni-
ties, contact the Bureau of Appoint-
ments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext.
371.
(Continued on Page 4)

2

U. S. 12 AT SALINE
Presents
""The Guardsman"
A Comedy by Franz Molr
JULY 13 THROUGH JULY 24
OPENING TONIGHT
Curtain at 8:30 Reservations held till 8:20
Admission $1.65 Call Saline 31

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FIRST TIME ON THE SCREEN! THE INSIDE STORY!
RED NER EXPSEDEG !
YOU'"WE EVER SEEN ANYTHING ILIKE IT'.

SUSAN d
HAYWARD
as LEAH the wayward'
S ICHARD
WIDMARK
.as FISKE the cheat!

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