SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1961 To~ M " Views UnionBargaining Power :+>-- O THE MICHIG~AN DANL LMru IVES, AL au ITAXvasAvtoty itMaLZ PAGE THRI 1 ELECTRONIC WONDER: State Seeks Highway When collective bargaining dis- putes arise, as between the union and steel companies in 1959, un- ion power far outweighs that of the company, R. Conrad Cooper, executive vice-president in charge of personnel services for the Unit- ed States Steel Corporation, said, yesterday. Speaking at the Advanced Per- sonnel Development Course pre- sented by the University Bureau of Industrial Relations, Cooper emphasized that the future course of labor - management relations may determine America's success as a world power and a free. en- terprise system. Nation's Future The nation's future depends "in part upon the success or failure of collective bargaining, not only as an institution for the handling of employe-employer dealings, but - - . 1 DIAL NO 5-6290 HELD OVER 2ND BIG WEEK THE HAPPY SUMMERTIME HIT! WAIT DIlsNEy tvay as it effects the economic health of individual plants, companies, industries and the country at large," he said. Union leaders "are in a position of tremendous power with attend- ant responsibility. The existence and use of this vast power pro- duces the situation where in a group of steel companies negotiate in concert through a designated negotiating team. Union Force "On the union's side there is the full force of organized aggres- siveness. The union enjoys and heretofore has employed legal im- munity at will to shut down most of the nation's steel-making capa- city to enforce its wage and bene- fit demands," he explained. "But on the side of the com- panies there lies only the power of persuasion ' and ability to say no to demands which they cannot conscientiously accept - and to suffer the consequences. Job Destruction "The enforcement of uniform wage and benefit increases upon the many competing companies obviously poses unequal problems for the individual companies and plants. The ultimate result of such practices, if continued, can only be the destruction of jobs and employment in companies unable to remain competitive," he said. Cooper said a small number of the larger steel companies have been forced to "band together as best they can" to bargain with "a powerful labor union whose tac- tics are of such a magnitude as to have national and even world consequences." Smaller companies stand aside to await their eco- nomic fate," he added. Results of union power in the steel industry from 1940 to 1958, R. CONRAD COOPER ... organized aggressiveness Cooper said, include an average rise in man-power employment costs of 8 per cent per year, com- pounded, while the average in- crease in steel shipments per man- hour was only two per cent per year, compounded. "Under the present arrange- ment, our hope for more construc- tive collective bargaining in steel in the foreseeable future rests on whether the leaders of the steel- workers union will recognize their great responsibility and meet it as effectively as they have here- tofore exercised their great pow- er," he added. Herman Quits. WHRV Post Don Herman, of Radio Station WHRV, has resigned to accept a newscasting job with WCKY, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Herman, of Ypsilanti, was pro- gram and news director of WHRV. He will be replaced by his assist- ant, Dave Nichols. Michigan is in the running for selection as the site of the world's first electronic highway. The main stretch under consid- eration is US-23 from Ann Arbor to Toledo. An electronic brain would con- trol the cars on such a highway. The driver might travel with no hands on the wheel while gadgets controlled the car. The other pos- sibility for the highway's design is that of hoisting the cars on electrically controlled platforms. Bids Considered Competitive bids from private industry for construction of the road will be considered by the Bureau of Public Roads. General Motors is bidding'from Michigan. Other firms such as Westing- house, Bendix and the Radio Cor- poration of America are trying for the contract. Advisers have told the Kenne- dy Administration that the auto-' matic highway is technologically feasible. It has been the subject of private industry and univer- sity research. High Priority A committee of experts will sub- mit recommendations to Secre- tary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges, for approval, after which they will be submitted to Con- gress. The Administration has in- dicated that the project has high priority status. The tentative proposal calls for a 100-mile stretch of highway- possibly between two major cities, but including rural area. An esti- mated $50 million would be spent on the first phase of the experi- mental program. The State Highway Department is also considering as tentative routes Interstate 75 from Detroit to Toledo, US-131 south from Kal- amazoo, US-127 south from Jack- son and US-27 from below Lans- ing. Tourist Attraction State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie said the highway "would be a wonderful thing for Michigan." The highway is seen as a major boost to Michigan's economy as a tourist attraction. Officials say that it would rival the Straits of Mackinac Bridge. "Motorists would come from all the other 49 states. It would be a terrific attraction. It's too bad we can't figure out some way to charge admission-if we get it- but, of course, it would be free," said one of them. Other states which are attempt- ing to win the construction of the highway are Ohio and California. To Replace HUAC Film The Defense Department has completed a film which will re- place the controversial "Operation Abolition" and "Communism on the Map." The film is to be a training source for members of the armed forces. It is described as an "offi- cial narrative of Communism." The new film is labeled the "Chal- lenge of Ideas." The film was produced in co- operation with Edward R. Mur- row, chief of ' the United States Information Agency, Hanson Bald- win of the New York Times, Low- ell Thomas, television and radio commentator and John Wayne and Helen Hayes of film and stage. Work on the script of the film was started over a year ago under the direction of the Pentagon's troop information and education experts. Production of the master film was close to $20,000. The army has ordered 200 copies, the Navy and Marine Corns 184, and the Air Force 275. Wayne and Miss Hayes are said to have donated their services.- "Challenge of Ideas" is replac- ing similar films by nondefense organizations. Among them are the House Un-American Activi- ties Committee's film of the San Francisco riots against the com- mittee, "Operation Abolition," and "Communism on the Map." The Defense Department with- drew these two films from use stating that they would be re- placed by one of its own making. In ordering this done, the depart- ment said the film would be used for troop information programs. The new film will be followed by a second which is based on youth organizations. This film is still in the script-writing stage. Several others are planned for production. TON ITE SAT., J U LY 15 JAZZ DUO, featuring ANDY ANDERSON 9 P.M. - 12:30 A.M. Adm. 75c. CAFE PROMETHEAN 508 E. William USED CARS '58 VAUXALL 4-door sedan in excellent condition A gas saver-$735.0 Overseas Auto Sales 331 S. 4th Ave. NO 2-2541 N2 VW CONVERTIBLE 1958 with radio and white walls Very nice-$1250 Overseas Auto Sales 331 S. 4th Ave. NO 2-2541 N4 '59 ALFA-ROMEO Guilletta Roadster with radio, heater in tip-top condition $1995.00 Overseas Auto Sales 331 S. 4th Ave. NO 2-2541 N3 BUSINESS SERVICES What's Sunday brunch without bagels? RALPH'S MARKET has 'em 709 Packard Ralph's is open till midnight every night. J TUTORING IN SPANISH-M.A., college teaching experience. NO 2-1716. J14 RIDING LESSONS Horseback riding. English equipment. Horses boarded and trained. Herbell Farm, 4715 E. Joy Road. Phone NO 3-7708. Lloyd Givens, manager-trainer. J16 SWEET CHERRIES By the quart or by the pound, pitted. Also starting the 17th, Montmorency cherries, washed, pitted and sugared. HURON FARMS 4674 E. Huron River Dr. NO 8-7808 JI5 PERSONAL SINCERE, Reallyhad a fabulous time in the Towers. Hot for Rands- HONEST. F6 ACADEMIC-MINDED MOTHERS (pets and spouses prohibited, but offspring prerequisite) interested in co-op hous- ing for fall, please write P.O. Box 466. F9 FOR SALE JAGUAR XK-120 M Coupe, wire wheels, 22,000 miles. NO 3-9821. BI DIAMONDS-Several beautiful stones- sacrifice. NO 2-5685, evenings. B9 '57 METROPOLITAN convertible. Excel- lent condition. $595. 906 E. Ann St. B0 HELP WAN ED MEN SUMMER EMPLOYMENT AFTERNOONS & EVENINGS 1. Must be neat-appearing 2. Above-average intelligence 3. Able to converse intelligently WAGES TO BE'DISCUSSED AT INTERVIEW CALL MR. NEUMANN NO 3-6003 . 9 A.M.-2 P.M. H9 BARGAIN CORNER SUMMER SPECIALS: Men's Wear: short sleeve sport shirts 99c & $1.50; knit sport shirts $1.99: wash-n-wear slacks $2:77; many other big buys-Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W2 TENNIS RACKETS, bicycles, patio fur- niture, draperies. THE TREASURE MART, 529 Detroit Street. NO 2-1363. Open Monday and Friday nights till 9:00. W LOST AND FOUND FOUND: Woman's watch, vicinity of Burton Tower. Call 3-2544. A50 LOST-35 mm. colored slides in yellow envelope, Ann St., Hospital area. Please call NO 3-5381. Reward. A5 LINES 2 3 4 Figure 5 average words to a line. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. Phone NO 2-4786 FOR RENT ONE 2-ROOM APT. with bath, private parking, and automatic washer and dryer available July 19. 1-room effi- ciency apt. completely furnished. 2 other furnished apts. available for fall. 1921 E. Huron. Call at back basement door. NO 5-4767. C24 CAMPUS Furnished Apartment. $50 per month, summer only. NO 3-4322. C19 ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for rent. NO 2-1443. 017 CAMPUS-HOSPITAL-Lovely furnished apartment suitable for four girls. Parking. Call 2-0671. C66 3-ROOM furnished apt. near Packard and State. $70 for summer months. NO 3-8458. C20 ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking available for summer and fall semes- ters. NO 2-1443. 016 FOUR GIRLS desire roommate to share house July-August. Reasonable rent. Close to campus. Call NO.8-6378 eve- nings. C23 NOW AVAILABLE - Across from East Quad: 2 parking spaces, part of an exciting apartment, and a small duck. Call NO 5-7892. 09 CAMPUS AREA-One-, two- and three- bedroom apartments. Summer or fall rental. Call Robertson Realty Co., NO 2-6436. Evenings NO 8-7878 or 426- 3402. 022 FURNISHED University-operated apart- ments available to married students and married faculty for summer session. Leases available on short term basis. Call NO 2-3169 or apply University Apartments Office, 2364 Bishop St. Office open Mon. through Sat. 014 Ann Arbor's FINEST Apartments at Moderate Rentals Schedule of Rentals:. Studio'.................$ 98 to 126 1-Bedroom .............. 120 to 180 2-Bedroom .............. 225 to 270 3-Bedroom .............. 270 to 330 (Including heat, water, Prigi- daire range and refrigerator, swimming pool) Models open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily and Sunday. Immediate occupancy. 2200 Fuller Road. HURON TOWER'S MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS A-B New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGO1 Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-183 .70 .85 1.00 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES 1.95 2.40 2.85 1 DAY 3 DAYS Preview of Grinnell's PIANO FESTIVAL SALE Come in any day and see these tremendous values from $399 up. GR IN N EL L'S 3 S. Main NO 2-56 6 DAYS 3.45 4.20 4.95 32 ,fi a~r aid Trian~ .EE as 4 X3 67 Os X2 ake ng G2 ES CE ie Le. si I Pr~lam Notes AJ/r I the home of Steinway pin TRANSPORTATION DRIVING TO DENVER July 28. Can ti riders, share expenses and drivi Call NO 3-4522 after 6 p.m. CAR SERVICE. ACCESSORI FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and model of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sale, 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 C-TED STANDARD SERVIC Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessorl Complete Automotive Service-All products and services guaranteed. Road Service "You expect more from Standard and you get It." 1220 South University NO 8-9168 Read Daily Class ifed ~~. JOIN THE FUN at HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill St. TAMARA SLOBODKIN ISRAELI FOLK SINGER will perform followed by group participation and refreshments Tuesday, July 18-7:30 P.M. . . COOL "BRILLIANT" -N.Y. Times "BRAWLING and EXHILARANT ABANDON on the SCREEN !" Vi. --Time Magazine j DIAL 8-6416 The "retirement years" of Amer- ican citizens will be discussed in the "Understanding Our World" series at 9:00 a.m. Sunday over station WXYZ. Participants in the University's Annual Conference on Aging will consider the development, need for and national importance of "or- ganizations of the aged" in a pan- el discussion hosted by Clark Tib- bitts, chief of program planning for the special staff on aging, Office of the Secretary of Health, Education and welfare. Happy Yeoman .,.. The University television series "The Western Way" will present a discussion of "The Happy Yeo- man" by Prof. Howard H. Peck- ham at 8:30 a.m., Saturday over station WXYZ. The director of the Clements Historical Library will consider the facts and myths in the evolution of America's "last great frontier figure" with the series's host, Prof. Niel Snortum of the engineering school. Observatory Open ... The University's Radio Astron- omy Observatory on Peach Moun- tain will be open to the public between 2:00 and 4:30 p.m., Sun- day, at 10280 North Territorial Road. TIm observatory will be open to visItors on the third Sunday of each month through September. The radio telescope detects faint radio waves occurring in deep space. Quintet Concert The University Woodwind Quin- tet will present a concert at 8:30 p.m. Monday, in Rackham Lecture Hall. They will be joined by Charles Fisher at the piano in playing "Suite" by George Philipp Tele- xnann; "Quintet, Op. 51" by Wal- lingord Riegger; "Scherzino, Op. 24" by Gardner Read; "Cassation" by Richard Arnell; "Summer Mu- sic, Op. 31" by Samuel Barber; and "Sextet, Op. 6" by Ludwig Thuille. Student Music ... John R. Lindenau, grad. and James Herring, grad, playing the trumpet and piano, respectively, will give a concert at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Aud. A. They will be assisted by John Morse, grad. an'd Jerry Bilik, grad., playing the horn and trombone. The program consists of works by DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Ed NYHerald Tribune} (Continued from Page 2) Lecture: Winifred L. Post, Dana Hall School, Wellesley, Mass., will speak on "Towards Better Examinations in Eng- lish" on Mon., July 17 at 4 p.m. in Aud. C. Physics Lecture: Dr. M. H. Macfar- lane, University of Rochester, will. speak on "Particle Giant Resonances in Welter Weight Nuclei" on Mon., July 17 at 3:30 p.m. In 2038 Randall Lab. Doctoral Examination for Alfred Cur- tis Hunting, Physics; thesis: "An In- terferometric Study of the Interaction of Plane Shock Waves with Monotonic Channel-Area Constrictions in the 2" X 7" Shock Tube," Mon., July 17, 2038 Randall Lab., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, Otto Laporte. Placement NOTICE - The Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information will be open for business as usual, Mon., July 17, in its new facilities at 3200 SAB. The Summer Placement Serv- ice will also be open on Monday in 212 SAB. Both offices are now located in the newly-built addition to the Student Activities Building. The fol- lowing new University Extensions have been assigned: Director & College Placement - Ext. 3541. Teacher Placement & Career Counsel- ing-Ext. 3547. General & Summer Placement-Ext. 3544. PERSONNEL REQUESTS-GENERAL DIVISION: Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. -Bi-weekly listing of current vacancies for college grads, men & women: now on file at 3200 SAB. Opening for Super- visors, Librarians, Bibliographers, Sci- ence Specialists, etc. Knowledge of modern foreign languages desirable for most. Bendix Systems Division, Ann Arbor -WOMAN Grad. to act as Instructor of shorthand & typing for company's Secretarial Training Program. BA in Lib'. Arts or Educ. (Some educ. courses preferred.) No experience required. Benson & Benson, Inc., Princeton, N.J.-Project Director Trainees for in- dependent Market Research Firm. Op- portunities in all fields of market re- search. WOMEN college grads. Work involves field travel part of the time. Telemann, Casterede, Giannini and Poulenc. Innovations .. . The 32nd annual Summer Edu- cation Confernece will be in prog- ress here Monday through Wed- nesday. "Innovations in Teaching"' is the theme of the conference. Morning general sessions will be open to the public in Arch. Aud. ___________________at Some course work in Psych., Math., English desirable. Timken Roller Bearing Co., Canton, Ohio-Market Research Statistician for Market Res. Dept. Grad. with back- ground in Math., preferably through calculus, and with work in mathemati- cal statistics. Will be responsible for supervising others in dept. Prefer re- cent college grad, interested in on-the- job trng. Please contact General Division, Bu- reau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for further information. College Placement Interviews-Mon., p.m., July 17; Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB-Dean Keesecker of Salem College, Salem, West Va. will interview candidates to teach English; Chemistry & Home Econ., for academic year 1961- 62. Also seeking Librarian. PhD's pre- ferred but not essential. Interested candidates, phone Mrs. Gerther, Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 3541 for appointment. NO 3-0800 NO 5-9161 LAST PERFORMANCE TONIGHT 8:00 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE MY 3 ANGELS $1.75, 1.25 I j NEXT WEEK: MAYAKOVSKY'S "THE BEDBUG" biting satire on Communist society I 010 faturd&W N1ight and TONIGHT at 7 and 9 KOJI SH4MA'S THE GOLDEN DEMON Jun Necami, Fuliko Yamamoto 1, U U SHOWS at 1:00-3:05 DIAL o 5:10-6:55 and 9:05 2-6264 0FEATURES at 1:25 3:30-5:15-7:20 and 9:30 j Lis 0