100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

August 01, 1959 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1959-08-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

IIIED

Beach Grows Warmer, Final Exams Near

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
SPECIAL
TEN-DAY
LINES ONE-DAY RATE
2 *80.3
396 .47
4 1.12 .54
Figure 5 average words to a line.
Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri.
and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786
-. r rrl r -

TRANSPORTATION
NEED RIDER for drive to Berkley, Cali.
Aug. 17, Paul, NO 2-1604. 07
FOR SALE
DIAMOND % carat. Reasonably priced.
Call NO 3-6897 after 6 P.M. B15
PORTABLE Smith - Corona typewriter,
excellent condition. $60. NO 2-2521,
Room 3322 after 6 P.M. B14
3 SIAMESE. kittens, male and female,
about 4 months old. Also stud service.
Phone NO 2-9020. B12
FOR SALE: % ton quiet, automatic
room air conditioner. Used 3 months.
Call NO 3-0047 after 5.. B8
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
Try Hammond's new play time plan.
Includes organ in your home for 30
days with 6 free lessons in our
studio for only $25.
Rent a Spinet piano of your own
choice-$10 per month.
GRINNELL'S

FOR RENT
ATTRACTIVELY furnished, front newly
decorated, one bedroom" apartment
near Rackham and Frieze Buildings.
Automatic heat - quiet house. Per-
feet for graduate couple or mature
woman. NO 2-0741. C44
MALE STUDENTS -- two singles and
twodlarge double roomsnfor, graduate
students in a quiet neighborhood.
Linens furnished. NO 2-1465, 923
Olivia. C43
CAMPUS APT., available now. Newly
furnished and decorated. Call NO
2-7566. ' C42
ON CAMPUS: Neat 2 room, furnished,
utilities, private bath. NO '8-7234.
C41
SMALL 3 room house, one block from
campus. Furnished. Reasonable. Also
rooms for men. Call NO 2-6094 in P.M.
C39
TWO RQOMS and bath furnished -
close to campus and downtown. Air
conditioned, laundry facilities, T.V.
antennae, off street parking, clean-
just redecorated. Utilities except elec-
tricity. $75 month. Call NO 3-5532
after 6 P.M. b40
E. UNIV.--CHURCH-FOREST. Attrac-
tive furnished apartments for one to
four students, available Sept. $80-$170.
NO 3-2800. C38
7 ROOMS
Partly furnished. 2nd floor apart-
ment. Kitchen facilities. 4th Ave.
at Liberty. Call NO 2-0251 after. 5
P.M., NO 2-4805 after 6 P'M. C37
ONE ROOM studio for bachelor girl,
in lovely campus area, furnished,
complete community kitchen. NO 2-
6987. C33
DELUXE 3 room furnished apartrjent
includes eat and water. Semi-private
bath facilities. $90 a month. NO
2-9020. C27
ROOMS FOR RENT for girls. .?2 block
from campus. 1218 Washtenaw. NO
8-7942 for arrangements. C12
ONE BLOCK from campus, modern apts,
814 So. Forest. NO 8-7089 or 3-3280.
Cl
PERSONAL
Marty,
Be optimistic.
Andi P29
Carol:
Happy new residence. That's gonna
be a lot of exercise if you're gonna
use your bike.
'Bill F31
MAHALIA JACKSON-Ann Arbor High,
Sept. 26 -- Saturday, 8:30 P.M. Tickets
on sale at Bob Marshall's Book Store.
P28

USED CARS,
'56 FORD, radio, heater, auto. trans.,
wfw, 2 tone, low mileage. Like new.
NO. 5-7844. N39
VOLKSWAGENS
,56 Green sedan, excellent condition.
'55 Black sunroof with radio. Sharp.
CHEAPI ES
'41 Chevrolet ...................$ 95
'49 Plymouth .................$ 75
'53 Ford ...................$150
'53 Chevrolet.................$195
Imported Cars
23 E. Michigan, Ypsilanti
N37
1959 SAAB $1,795
Mich. European Car Corp.
Liberty at Ashley NO 5-5800
N36
'54 DODGE, radio and heater, new tires,
very clean. Good transportation. NO
5-7844 N38
WANTED
One shrewd discerning person, in-'
terested in purchasing a good used
car. 1951 Chevrolet sedan in perfect
condition that must be sold by
August 15. $175 or best oier. You
have nothing to lose and all to
gain. Call NO 5-7356. N35
1957 VOLKSWAGON, sedan, good condi-
tion. Beige, white walls, radio. NO
3-9012. N34.
1953 V.W., Mint condition. $695. PI
9-0767, Northville.. N32
KARMANN-GHIA, '58 VW sport coupe.
Beige, corduroy upholstery. 17,000
miles and in top condition. Call NO
3-0105. N27
HELP WANTED
WANTED: Finnish speaking student to
assist in language tutoring. NO 2-2137.
H26
FOR FALL and spring semesters, girl'
student to work in private home in
exchange for room and board. NO
3-8810. 'H18
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR: Young woman
25-40 to train for assistant director
in Home for teen-age school girls.:
Resident position. Non-smoker pre-
ferred. Undergraduate considered.
Write to: Miss Esther Bain, 548 East
Grand Blvd., Detroit 7, Michigan.
H23
NEED MAN with first class engineering
license in radio. Also for on the air
part-time only, available at present.
NO 3-0569. H21

322 S, Main

NO 2-5667
X3

Complete line of HiFi components
including kits; complete service on
radio, phonographs and Hi equip-
ments.0
HI Fl STUDIO
1317 South University
1 block east at Campus Theatre
Phone NO 8-7942
X2
Phone NO 2-4786-
for Classified Advertising
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES'
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly, service is* our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and accessor-
ies. Warranted & guaranteed. See
us for the best price on°new &
used tires. Road servce-mechanic
on duty.
"You expect more from Standard
and you get It"
1220 S. University at Forest
NO 8-9168

-David Giltrow -David Gil
More children and fewer adults find time for the beach as the heat of August and pressure of exams both bear don
IN SPECIAL SERIES: y t'
'U' istTlviPtlnPe n

Correspondence between Nobel
Prize winning Russian author
Boris Pasternak and his American
translator, Eugene Kayden, will be
featured on the University televi-
sion series, "Understanding Our
World," at 9:30 a.m .tomorrow.
"I write much less letters now
than before in consequeffce of my
own local experiences and trials,
that have nothing in common with
my true feelings to persons," Pas-
ternak wrote to Kayden in his
final correspondence.
Prof. Kayden, of the University
of the South, Sewanee, Tenn., be-
gan the correspondence with Pas-
ternak in 1958, just when his novel
was the center of an international

'1

S2

.!

uproar.

WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP
Bumping and Painting
2007 South State NO 2-3350
S1
BUSINESS SERVICES
FAST, accurate typing at reasonable
rates. NO 3-9104. J22
TYPING: Thesis, Term papers, reason-
able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590.
Jil
lbR TODAY'S breakfast why not buy
some lox, cream cheese, bagels, onion
rolls, or assorted Danish pastry? Plan
ahead also . . later in the week
we'll have smoked whitefish, gefitle
fish, kosher soups, pastrami, and
corned beef. Shop at Ralph's for these
delicious foods.
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard N02-3175
J3
REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes
rewoven. Let us save your clothes.
Weave-Bac Shop. 224 Nickels Arcade.
NO 2-4647. J5

Friendship Developed
Kayden first wrote to Pasternak
in a formal, business-like way be-
cause he wished to solve some
probproblems he had in translat-
ing Pasternak's poems for a book
published by the University Press.
The correspondence soon devel-
oped into a personal friendship,,
carried on- by mail, until the pres-
sures of the cold war ended the
exchange of letters.
Prof. Kayden hopes that they
can soon resume the correspon-
dence.
Views Pasternak
On the program, "Pictures of
Pasternak," he reports on his im-
pression of Pasternak as seen
through his letters and writings.
He characterizes him as a brave
man who has always emphasized
the, vitality* of life.
Kayden also demonstrates the
technique of translating from Rus-
DAILY OFFICI

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED
SMOKERS
SujCt wh W smoke ciga rettes needed forb
havioral study. $1.25 per hour. Call3-1531, ext.
-387 or sign up in the Personnel Office, Rm. 1020,
Administration Bldg.

For RESULTS
ReQd and Use
Daily Classifieds

sian by working on the concluding
lines from Pasternak's poem,
"Hamlet," that appears in "Dr.
Zhivago."
* * *
The work of the landscape
architect, from the hanging towers
of Babylon to a shopping center
in Detroit, is shown on this week's
program in the University tele-
vision series, "The Public Arts," to
be seen at 1 p.m. tomorrow.
' 'U' Architects Appear
"Molding the Earth" features
two University landscape archi-
tects, Walter Chambers and Wil-
liam Johnson, as they join series
host Guy Palazzola to relate the
history and demonstrate the work
of a "greatly misunderstood" pro-
fession.
Chambers, through slides and
pictures, traces landscape archi-
tecture from Mediterranean Gar-
dens to Medieval Monasteries to
the great expansion in 20th Cen-
tury America.
According to Chambers, the
landscape architect has always
been concerned with people, with
making his life more useful and
pleasant by controlling his en-
vironment.
Scope Great
Today, Chambers claims, the
scope of landscape architecture is
greater than ever, ranging from
individual gardens to beaches,
parks, highways, schools, to every
public place where the activities of
life are carried on.
Two typical problems are solved
on the program by Johnson-the
planning of a park in an indus-
AL BULLETIN
allurgy and strong minor in chem. or
equivalent. Desire man with at least
2-3 yrs. research and development ex-
perience in the field of coatings, cor-
rosion studies, or other surface pro-
tection techniques.
Diamond Gardner Corp., Middletown,
Ohio, Mechanical Engrs., Chemical
Engrs., and two experienced Carrier
Folding Carton Salesmen.
The Kendall Co., Chicago, Ill., Man-
agement Trainees for this firm which
mfg. surgical dressings. Man with B.A.
in Bus. Admin., Economics or Liberal
Arts. Age: 21-35. Prefer young man
with service requirements completed.
San Diego :County, Calif., announces
examination for Planner III.
Procter & Gambl.e Co., Cincinnati,
Ohio and cities throughout the U.S.,
Dept. Mgr., Project Engr., Equipment
Design and Development Engr., Sr. Sta-
tistician, Applied Mathematician, Re-
search Chemist, Process Development
Engr., Food Development Engr., Ana-
lytical Chemist (Supervisor), Library
Chemist (Female), and Packaging Engr.
The following companies need engi
neers:
Swift & Co., Chicago, Ill.: Mainten-
ance Mgmt. Engr. Mech., Elec., or
Chem. Engrg. degree.
Sarkes Tarzian, Inc., Bloomington,
Ind.: Broadcast Equipt. Sales Engr.,
Quality Control Analyst and Produc-
tion Engrs
Mechanical Handling Inc., Detroit,
Mich.: Sales Engrg. Trainees. Mech.
and Ind. Engrg.
N. Y. Naval Shipyard, Brooklyn: Civil,
Electrical, Mechanical, Metallurgical
or Marine Engrs., or Naval Architect.
B. F. Goodrich Co., Akron, Ohio:
Chem. Engrs. and Physical and Organ-
ic Chemists of all degree levels. Mech.
or Indus. Engrs.
Kimberly-Clark Co., Neenah, Wis.;
Chem., Civil, Electrical, and Mech.
Engrgs.
Ford Motor Co., Mt. Clemens, Mich,:
Chem. Engrgs. with B.S.C.E.
U. S. Gypsum Co., Chicago, Ill.: Asst.
Electrical Engrg., Epoxy Resin Chem-
ist, Purchasing Trainee, Chemist, Min-
ing Engr., Dealer Sales Trainees, and
Engrg. Sales Correspondent.
For further information concerning
any of the abov-e positions, contact the
Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin.,
Ext. 3371.-

trial-residential area of Dearborn
and the planning of a family gar-
den.
In solving these problems, he
shows how the landscape archi-
tect is concerned only secondarily
with plants and trees, and pri-
marily. with the way in which
people will use the land,
"There are men alive today older
than Italy or Germany," says Uni-
versity of Virginia anthropologist
Eric Wolf on the University tele-
vision. series, "Progress of Man,"
at 8:30 a.m. Aug. 8.
New Development
Wolf does not mean, however,
that there are Methuselahs among
us, but that the nation-state is a
fairly recent development in man's
political history.
Host Prof. Marshall Sahlins of
the anthropology department and
guest Wolf trace the development
of man's political institutions from
the decays of the ancient empires
of Egypt and Mesopotamia,
through the Greek and Romarf
states, the middle ages and feu-
dalism, to the rise of the nation-
state which begins about the 17th
century and continues on to the
late 19th century.
Economic Influence
Both Sahlins and Wolf agree
that the body economic leads the
body politic to this new level of
existence.
The rise of the middle class, and
the discovery of the new world,
along with numerous inventions,
so stimulated trade and commerce
that the'old feudal boundaries and
laws were too small to control the
expanding economy.
Every economy demands a poli-
tical and social system to control
it. The only political and social
system that could control the
economy of the 17th, 18th, and
19th centuries was the nation-
state.
Along with the nation-state
comes its 'ism': nationalism, a will
to identify ones well being with the
well being of the state, they con-
clude.
Eastern Plans
New Workshop
On Education
A workshop in intergroup edu-
cation will be held from Aug. 3
through Aug. 14 at Eastern Mich-
igan University.
The workshop, entitled "Accen-
tuate the Positive in Human Re-
lations," is being sponsored by
EMU in co-operation with the
Michigan Region, National Con-
ference of Christians and Jews.
The workshop will offer two
hours of graduate credit and will
work in areas of human relations
and intergroup education.
Designed for school 'personnel,
the workshop will meet five days
per week, with both morning and
afternoon sessions scheduled.
General Meetings, small group
sessions, and individual study will
be included.
Notices
Congregational Disciples E & R Stu-
dent Guild, meeting, Dr. Max Loehr,
slides and talk on Eastern Art in Re-
ligion, Aug. 2, 7 p.m., Guild House, 524
Thompson.

(Continued from Page 2?

H13

Physics-Math Seminar. Wed., Aug. 5,
11 a.m. Rm. 3017 Angell Hall. Prof.
G. Y. Rainich, "Waves and Particles."
Doctoral Examination for John Rich-
ard Metz, Psych.; thesis: "An Initial
Step in the Development of a Method
for Measuring Aspects of Ego Strength,"
Tues., Aug. 4, 7611 Haven Hall, 4:00
p.m. Chairman, J. B. Adelson.
Doctoral Examination for Martin
Patchen, Social Psychology; thesis:
"The Choice of Wage Comparisons,"
Mon., Aug. 3, 6625 Haven Hall, 9:00 a.m.
Chairman, T. M. Newcomb.
Doctoral Examination for Ilene Tova
Olken, Romance Languages & Liter-
atures: French; thesis: "Colette: As-
pects of Imagery," Tues., Aug. 4, 2072
Frieze Bldg., at 4:00 p.m. Chairman,
R. J. Niess.
Placement Notices
Cutler-Hammer, Inc., M il w a u k e e,
Wis. Electrical Engrg. graduates to
work in their Engrg. Dept. designing
electric motor control.
Crucible Steel Co. of America, Mid-
land, Pa. Physical Chemist. MS or bet-
ter in physical chem. or physical met-

STARTS
TODAY
1pEMtwll

D(AoL NO 2-2513
(Nate Time Schedule)

fir

I'l

t
ht A I Ati'1 Pl ? 1 9 L

Ending Tonight
Jerry Lewis in
"Don't Give Up the Ship"
Late Show 11 P.M.

DIAL NU -416
STARTING SUNDAY

Mom"

ANT NM-QUINN
HAL WALLIS' ..
PRODUCTION
'

I

,EN DING DIAL
TODAY '' NO 8-6416
Jacques Tati's "MY UNCLE"
Mr. Hulot returns to convulse you

"1' -

I

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan