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August 12, 1961 - Image 3

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1961-08-12

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AY, AUGUST 12, 1961

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE THREE

&Y, AUGUST 12, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE

Creal Doubts
Liquor Rule
To Chan 9 e
Mayor Cecil 0. Creal has ex-
pressed reluctance to "recommend
any change now in the City Char-
ter that would permit the sale of
liquor by the glass east of Divi-
sion St.
The ruling in question has been.
a part of the charter since 1904. It
prohibits the sale of intoxicants
by the glass in the part of the
city east of that line.
Creal cited the "hesitancy"
shown by the public to approve
liquoi by the glass for other areas
as was done recently, saying "I
believe the people will be very
hesitant to vote something out
that has been in the charter as
long as it has - and to have
open sales near campus."
But Creal said that the ex-
pansion of the city to the east
might eventually make a change
setting up a second eastern boun-
dary at the other side of, which
liquor might be sold by the glass.
He favors a charter change that
would open the eastern section of
Washtenaw Ave. to liquor by the
glass.

Ellis Relieves
Civil Defense
Area Director
John W. McConnell, area direc-
tor of Civil Defense for Michigan,
Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin and
Minnesota has been dismissed by
the Office of Civil Defense Mobili-
zation director Frank B. Ellis.
McConnell is one of the five
regional directors appointed by
the Eisenhower administration
who has been dismissed. Ellis said
the dismissals were a result of
the change in administration, in-
dicating that "a relationship of
confidence no longer exists" be-
tween himself and the regional
directors.
Institute Adds
New Physicist
Prof. Joseph A. Boyd, director
of the Institute of Science and
Technology has announced the ap-
pointment of Frederick B. Llewel-
lyn, now assistant to the president
of the Bell Telephone Labora-
tories, to the position of research
physicist.
Llewellyn will assist in direct-
ing the research and long range
planning of the IST.

U.S. To Strengthen Conventional Forces

WET WEATHER:
Storm Strands Student

MANPOWER BY 12(in millions of men)
TOTAL U.S. ARMED
SERVICE 1946-1961 11 SERVICE MANPOWER
1945 TO 1961
KOREAN ~
1,600-
(IN THOUSANDS OF MEN) - -2
..:..- -I
' "s- - : -1945 1950 1955 1960 1961
1,400 '.' "" .;
- *'. .
- .4-.
1200 -"ARM
WORLD WAR I" - BERLIN ~
DEMOBILIZATION .. - BERIN-
w":; ",;* "; BUILD-UP
1,000 AIR FORCE
- ..- 1
* ... *. * *,
600--*. .. ... .
L* A e e
20 . ..'::"
196198 15.192194196158160 16
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at ir,{ *.":'r?1'-r' :~..*.'. ... '.- } JX:frY:{"" '"'.--.-- . - ''"f."~~ hh.y'r 4' .,r '1 ;"r, }r :}: "":"~.{:::'4:ii",.:}"::M: :i}"{?}}":::tv
5:::""J'':}h -Y: : - h.'ti':Y..- :M} j'h r. ::? . ' ,i . -.WY --:t r J'r1Y rhr . .t M1> r.}.. e : JY 'YM:'h. """

By The Associated Press
The goal: 2,735,000 men under
arms.
The reason: Berlin.
In substance, that's the story of
America's move to beef up its
military arm.
When that number is reached-
and it won't take long-the United
States will have its biggest con-
ventional fighting force since the
Korean War.
In June, the exact figure for
the number of men in the Army,
Air Force, Navy and Marines
totaled 2,482,975. President Ken-
nedy's mobilization program -
sparked by growing concern over
Soviet strategy involving Berlin -
authorizes the call-up of 250,000
reservists as well as extending ac-
tive duty tours and enlistments
by one year.
The largest increase will be in
the Army with strength rising from
858,622 to 1,000,000.
The Air Force has already
alerted 28,000 men for a possible
call to active duty. In June, there
were 821,151 on the Air Force
roster. The goal is 880,000.
The Navy will go from 626,652,
to 657,000.
The Marines had been previously
ordered to add 15,000 men and
reach a strength of 190,000.
the ups-and-downs of military
strength from the period imme-
diately after World War II.

iI

IRMA THE BODY
appearing
TOWN HALL THEATRE
TOLEDO, OHIO
Matinee, 7:30, and 9:00 shows daily; mid-nite show Sat.
AUGUST 11 THRU 17

-Daily-David Marcus
UNDER THE WEATHER - One of many students caught In
yesterday's thunderstorm decides to wait out the deluge on the
steps of Angell Hall.

LEEIIEE S

No

rris.

Shows at
1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M.

erfPc t o tr.i: no-'err' CooZzit

DIAL
5-6290

PER KERR
COO O cm e G
(5'Gt9f aA 4 iS

.r

L-

lTHEA NAKlED EE

tiI

i

The
o f FIGARO
Come to the festivities tonight, 8:00
MOZART'S GREAT COMIC OPERA,
in English, presented by the University
Players, Department of Speech, and the
Opera Dept., .School of Music.
TONIGHT --$2.00, $1.50
Special performance
Monday -$1.75, 1.25

1

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of The Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editorial
responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3519 Administration Building
before 2 p.m., two days preceding
publication.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 12
40
General Notices
Attention August Graduates: College
of Literature, Science, and the Arts,
School of Education, School of Music,
School of Public Health, School of
Business Administration: Students are
advised not to request grades of I or X
in August. When such grades are abso-
lutely imperative, the work must be
made up in time to allow your instruc-
tor toreport the make-up grade not
later than 11 a.m. August 23. Grades
received after that time may defer the
student's graduation until a later date.
Recommendations for Departmental
Honors: Teaching departments wishing
to recommend tentative August gradu-
ates from the College of Literature,
Science, and the Arts, for honors or
high honors should recommend such
students by forwarding a ietter (in
two copies; one copy for Honors Coun-
cil, one copy for the Office of Regis-
tration and Records) to the Director,
Honors Council, 1210 Angell Hall, by
4 p.m. Tues., Aug. 22. Teaching depart-
ments in the School of Education
should forward letters directly to the
Offee of Registration and Records, 1513
Admin. Bldg. by 11 a.m. Wed., Aug.
23.
Mon., Aug. 14, 8:00, Lydia Mendels-
sohn Theatre: Extra performance of

I

Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro,"
presented by the University Players.
(Dept. of Speech) and the Opera
Dept. (School of Music).
Tickets available 10-8 tomorrow in
the box office, North end of the Wom-
en's League.
Events Saturday
Student Recital: James Sharp, or-
ganist, will present a recital in partial
fulfillment of the requirements for the
degree Master of Music on Saturday,
Aug. 12, 8:30 p.m. in Hill Aud. Com-
positions he will play are by Lubeck,
Scheidt, Buxtehude, Bach and Franck,.
Open to the general public.
Student Recital: Martha Rearick,
pianist, will present a recital on Sat.,
Aug. 12, 4:15 p.m., in Rackham Assem-
bly Hall. She will perform the compo-
sitions of Bach, Beethoven and Pro-
kofieff. This recital is presented in
partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree Master of Music. Open
to the general public.
Events Sunday
Doctoral Recital: Wesley True, pian-
ist, will, present a recital in partial
fulfillment of the requirements for the
degree Doctor of Musical Arts on Sun.,
Aug. 13, 4:15 p.m. in Aud. A. He will
play compositions by Bach, Schubert,
Stravinsky, and Beethoven. Open to the
general public.
Doctoral Recital: William Eifrig,
organist, will present a recital in par-
tial fulfillment of the requirements for
the degree Doctor of Musical Arts on
Sun.. Aug. 13, 8:30 p.m. in Hill Aud.
His program will be the Clavierubung
II of Johann Sebastian Bach. Open to
the general public.

I

14, 8:30 p.m. in the Rackham Assembly
Hall. She will perform the composi-
tions of Bach, Beethoven, Bartok, De-
bussy and Chopin. Open to the general
public.
Doctoral Examination for John Lean-
der Griffin, Chemistry; thesis: "Effect
of Electrode Vibration on Overpoten-
tials at a Lead Cathods in Sodium
Plumbite and Alkaline Lead Tartrate
Solutions," Mon., Aug. 14, 3003 Chem-
istry Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, L:
0. Case,
Doctoral Examination for Frank Lind-
ley Tobey, Jr., Physics; thesis: "The
Electrodeless Discharge as a Source for
the Emission Spectra of Polyatomic
Molecules," Mon., Aug. 14, 2038 Ran-
dall Lab., at 3:30 p.m. Chairman, R.
A. Wolfe.
Placement
POSITION OPENINGS:
Flint Civil Service, Flint, Mich.-As-
sistant Superintendent of Recreation
& Parks. MA & 5 yrs. exper. in rec. &
parks management. Need not be resi-
dent of Flint. Apply before Oct. 1.
Owens-Illinois, Toledo, O. - Sales
Rep. with BBA or BA degree-single
male, and Indus'l. Engrg. grads. Drafts-
man-Estimator, BSME or MSEE; Asst.
Project Engnr., BS in Chem. Engrg.;
and Mech. Engnr., BSME, for West
Coast locations. Also, openings as Pre-
scription Field Rep., Mech. Engnrs., Ac-
countants, & Mach. Designers for vari-
ous locations.
Gerber Baby Foods, Fremont, Mich.-
Trainees for positions in Auditing &
Accounting Depts. Degree in Bus. Ad.
or Accounting. Between Ages of 23 &
30.
American Hospital Supply Corp.,
Evanston, Il.-Grads as Trainees for
sales & management programs. Sales
Representatives for Hospital Supply
Div., Scientific Products Div., & In-
ternational Operations.
Connecticut Civil Service - Social
Worker with BA in Social Sciences &
2 yrs. exper. in Social Work (includ-
ing one yr. at level of Social Worker
11). Publicist position for Conn. resi-
dents only. BA & 2 yrs. exper. in news-
paper work. Apply for both before
Aug. 16.
Automotive Industry-Traveling po-
sitions available in Public Relations
field, for single men, college grads (any
(Continued on Page 4)
DIAL NO 2-6264

BARGAIN CORNER
BOY'S BIKE-Austrian-built J: C. Hig-
gins. $20. Call NO 2-4736.
TENNIS RACKETS, bicycles, patio fur-
niture, draperies. The Treasure Mart,
529 Detroit Street, NO 2-1363. Open
Monday and Friday nights till 9:00.
Wi
SUMMER SPECIALS: Men's Wear: short
sleeve sport shirts 99c & $1.50; knit
sport shirts $1.44; wash-n-wear slacks
2.77; many other big buys-Sam's
Store, 122 E. Washington. W2
TRANSPORTATION
RIDER WANTED to Los Angeles area.
Leaving August 22. Share expenses,
driving. Call NO 2-4593 or NO 2-3241.
G10
DRIVING TO San Diego about Aug. 18.
Can take riders, sharing driving and
expenses. Call NO 3-2783. 09
WANTED-Driver to take car to Port-
land or San Francisco, arriving about
25th. NO 2-7132, Aug. 14 on. G8
FOR SALE
1961 LAMBRETTA, model 150. Best of-
fer. Call NO 5-6852. B19
CRUISAIRE MOTOR SCOOTER. Sum-
mer Student must sell . . . sacrifice
for $90.00. It has served me well and
is in good condition-why not let it
serve you too? NO 3-6597. B15
OLDTOWN CANOE. At Wirth's Canoe
Livery, or call NO 3-9154. B16
1956 SPORTSMAN mobile home, 33 ft.
by 8 ft. $1600. Ideal for couple. Full
bath. Clean. NO 3-4016 or HIckory 9-
2306. B13

Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri.
Phone NO 2-4786

4

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

LINES
2
3

I

DIAL 8-6416
Ends Tonight
MYLENE DEMONGEOT
MICHAEL CAIG
ANNE H EYWOOD
JAMES ROBERTSON
JUSTICE
UPSTAIRS and
DOWNSTAIRS
* STARTING SUNDAY
'A sex comedy
which is
completelyr
!uniquely French.]
turned
so neatly'
and has
such
a good
run
,on each
comic
stroke,,.
that
It never
lets
>ArcherwWnston .Y.Post
s r

ONE-DAY
.70
.85

SPECIAL
SIX-DAY
RATE
.58
.70

1.00
Figure 5 average words to a line

83

WANTED
WANT APT. MANAGER'S JOB for next
two years. Previous experience. Call
NO 5-9558. HH1
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
FOREIGN CAR SERVICE
We service all makes and models
of Foreign and Sports Cars.
Lubrication $1.50
Nye Motor Sales
514 E. Washington
Phone NO 3-4858
S7
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly service is our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and accessories
Complete Automotive Service-A l
products and services guaranteed.
Road Service
"You expect more from Standard
and you get it."
1220 South University
NO 8-9168
51
BUSINESS SERVICES
Food for thought at
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard
fresh bread
fresh fruit
meat
specialties
Ralph's is open till midnight daily
J12
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington NO 2-1834
X3
Preview of Grinnell's
PIANO FESTIVAL SALE
Come in any day
and see these tremendous
values from $399 up.
GRINNELL'S

FOR RENT
ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for
rent. NO 2-1443. C17
APARTMENT FOR RENT-Men stu-
dents. 4 rooms and bath. Furnished
for three or four. HA 6-3441. C36
ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking
available for summer and fall semes-
ters. NO 2-1443. 016
BRANDIES CO-OP for married stu-
dents: 3-rm. apt. for $73 including
utilities. Near camrpus. Children wel-
come. Call 3-1444. 803 E. Kingsley. C35
REDECORATED APARTMENTS - Two
blocks from campus. Newly furnished
and- painted. For 1, 2, 3, or 4 girls.
NO 3-7268. C32
APARTMENT FOR 5 MEN, very well
furnished, innercoil spring mnat-
tresses, 2 baths. Nice location, near
campus, street parking. Phone NO
2-5152. C30
GRADUATE COUPLE - Delux owners
4-room apt. for 9 months. Combina-
tion television, piano, custom twin
beds. Formica kitchen, dishwasher.
Garage available. $125 per month.
Campus area. Phone 3-1937. C37
GRADUATE COUPLE-Beautiful studio
apt. 12x30 living room, new formica
stainless steel kitchen, and bath.
Year around lease, $95 per month.
Free parking. Campus area. Phone
3-1937. C38
RESERVE YOUR
APARTMENT
FOR FALL NOW
with more and more people
discovering the advantages of
living at Huron Towersrand
with the September rental
rush approaching, it's wise to
reserve your apartment now.
A deposit will hold it for you.
Schedule of Rentals
Studio...........$ 98 to $126
1-Bedroom.........$120 to $180
2-Bedroom.........$225 to $270
3-Bedroom ........ $270 to $330
(Rentals include heat, water,
Frigidaire range and refriger-
ator, swimming pool.)
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
HURON
TOWERS
APARTMENTS
2200 Fuller Road
NOrmandy 3-0800, 5-9161
Models open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Daily and Sunday
U. of M. Bus Service one block away
010
REAL ESTATE
BY OWNER, will sacrifice: 2-bedroom
ranch, oak floors, storms and screens,
garage, fenced yard. Located at 1126
Hawthorne, Ypsilanti. Key at 1040
Olivia, Ann Arbor. Terms available.
No reasonable offer will be refused.
Reply Box 104, Michigan Daily. R12
INCOME PROPERTY for sale. $1500
down. Student apartments for rent.
Call 5-9114.

ENDS WEDNESDAY ;*

ll.

323 S. Main

NO 2-56671

GaffDNPHMENU
ANHONIQUIN
b cMAN

I

the home of Steinway pianos
X2
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-Sealpoint Siamese, approx. 15
months nld, vicinity of Church-S.
Universtiy. Call 3-3854 after 5:30 p.m.
A?
USED CARS
VOLVO, 1960-White, excellent condi-
tion. Professor leaving country. Must

II'

I

I

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