FRIDAY. JULY 21,1961, THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TF11REE FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1961. TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TH1~EE USES FORCE: Bourguiba Seeks Leadership 'U' Acquires Collection Of Valuable Mollusks 0 INEro By RICHARD K. O'MALLEY Associated Press News Analyst PARIS 0P) - President Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia has long cherished a dream of becoming the revered leader of the Moslem tri- umvirate in North Africa: Tuni- sia, Algeria and Morocco. His unleashing of military force to drive the French out of Bi- zerte may advancethat dream or turn it into a nightmare. Bourguiba's basic motives in suddenly raising a new demand for the French to leave the big Bi- zerte base are likely manifold. With a solution to the long Algerian rebellion lying some- where in the relatively near fu- ture, Bourguiba would face a strong, united Moslem leadership in Algeria which had already prov- ed its mettle to the Arab world. His own position, as host to rebel Premier Ferhat Abbas and the Ab- bas government in Tunis while they oppose the French, would be pushed into a secondary position. Seeks Peace By jumping to the fore as a I--- militant nationalist, supporting his demands with troops and gun- fire, Bourguiba may have hoped to take his place among those who faced up to France with arms and men. But he has clouded his move- ment in that direction by adding a vague claim to part of the French-held Sahara. The Algerian rebels look on this with distaste, feeling that his very claim indicates that region is open to negotiation. They claim it is rightfully Algerian, and thus in their own domain. When Tunisia achieved inde- pendence, the French and Tuni- sians agreed to negotiate at an unspecified later date on French evacuations of the Bizerte base. In recent months Bourguiba has demanded that the French leave immediately. No French Refusal There has been no public re- fusal by the French to talk out the problem, and only this week President Charles de Gaulle indi- r OM& NOW! , HELD LOVER ! "ABSOLUTELY rd STAGGERING . i and BRILLIANTr M g DIAL NO 8-6416 Through Saturday cated negotiations could be under-t taken. But he cautioned sternly that they could not be started under the menace of force. The French themselves are in a dilemma fraught with dangerous potentialities. Their peace talks with the Algerian rebels resumed yesterday. One of the things to be settled is the future of the big Algerian naval base at Mers-el- Kebir. If Bourguiba is successful in making them quit Bizerte, the French case for retention of French-run Mers-el-Kebir could be weakened. Sees Need Foreign Minister Maurice Couve{ de Murville told the National As- smbly yesterday that Bourguiba himself had recognized a need for the Algerian situation to be nor- malized before taking up the Bi- zerte question. In other words, the French were anxious to settle a rebellion which has plagued them for seven years, and to iron out the future of Mers-el-Kebir before going to the table on Bizerte. Bourguiba evidently felt he could not wait. If he succeeded at Bizerte and the rebels compromis- ed on Mers-el-Kebir his prestige in the Arab world would skyrock- et. Nationalist Frenzy Somewhere in the uneasy mid- dle is the United States. Aid funds and other assistance from the United States make up three-fifths of Tunisia's budget. The United States is also a firm ally of France. It can hardly act as a friend of one without of- fending the other. IST' Studies New Methods Of Sonar Use The University's Institute of Science and Technology has re- cently begun experimentation with special data-processing techniques for use in a new sonar system for detecting and tracking subma- rines at very long ranges in large ocean areas. The sonar system is being de- veloped by the Office of Naval Research's Project "Artemis." It is named after the Greek goddess of the hunt. Sonar discovers the location and range of submarines by bouncing sound waves off them and meas- uring how long it takes the waves to return from the submarine. This process is similar to the ra- dar principle. The University has recently ac- quired the Marsh Mollusk collec- tions which reflect great scien- tific value. The collections, donated by Mrs. Philip L. Marsh, represent some Blue and Gray To Re-Enact 4 Bull Run Battle MANASSAS BATTLEFIELD, Va. (WP)-Men in blue and gray bivou- acked side by side last night on the eve of the 100th anniversary of Manassas or Bull Run, the first great battle in the long agony that was the Civil War. Pulling in from all points of the compass, they unpacked auto trailers, set up the tents, ran up the stars and stripes or C.S.A. flag, oiled their old muskets, combed their beards, and got set for a grand re-enactment of the battle this weekend. Symbolic of the cameraderie that contrasts so sharply with the bitterness of 1861 was this an- nouncemept: A wealthy Yankee, proprietor of a summer resort at Lenox, Mass., has been picked to play the part of Stonewall Jackson and a man from the old South town of Ma- nassas, Va., has been cast as Wil- liam Tecumseh Sherman. Today, the actual anniversary og the battle, will see a dress re- hearsal of the re-enactment. The actual show will go on Saturday, with a repeat performance Sun- day. Two thousand men, mostly members of the North-South Skirmishers Association, will en- act the roles of the 30,000 federals and 30,000 Confederates who were. arrayed against each other that sweltering, dusty Sunday, in 1861. Only the most crucial events, including a dramatic artillery duel of horse-drawn batteries at the incredibly close distance of 330 yards, will be depicted. There is no way to show the long, cvhaotic retreat of the beat- en Federal army back to Wash- ington - a 26-mile, stumbling. flight impeded by the swarms of panicky Northern sightseers, who had driven out from the capital in gigs, hacks and fine carriages to picnic near the battlefield,, watch the federals crush the reb- els and press "on to Richmond." (One congressmen who had clam- ored loudest for an advance on Richmond ended up there; he was captured by the Confederates.) It was on this battlefield Brig. Gen. Thomas Jonathan Jackson got his nickname. of the most important shell col- lecting work ever done in Michi- gan. They contain an estimated 20,- 000 lots of mollusk shells (snails, clams, oysters, and other related animals) a lot being defined as the species found in any one giv- en geographic locality. They in- clude comprehensive groups of Michigan specimens and many others from Alabama, Georgia and other states. The collections are expected to be of great value in the prepara- tion of a "Handbook of Mollusks of the Great Lakes Region," now being compiled under the direc- tion of Prof. Henry van der Schalie of the zoology department, who is curator of mollusks in the Uni- versity Museum of Zoology. Prof. van der Schalie said the growth of population and urbani- zation works against natural his- tory. Subdivisions take over nat- ural habitats. He believes the im- portance of the work on the Marsh collection is that it was begun at a time when it was still possible to make an achievement. World News RoundupJ By The Associated Press CAIRO-President Gamel Abdel Nasser last night nationalized all banks and insurance companies in the United Arab Republic. A pr'esidential decree said the nationalization is another step forward in the nation's socialist program. * * * HAVANA-A new group of more than 100 American repatriates will be flown to Miami today, the Swiss embassy reported yesterday. The flight, the eighth arranged by the embassy, would leave more than 500 American residents of. Cuba still awaiting repatriation. * * * LONDON-Moscow Radio ac- cused Britain last night of taking "a very rash and dangerous step" in authorizing construction of a radar station to receive informa- tion from missile-spotting United States Midas satellites in flights over the Soviet Union. "It should not be forgotten that deliberate partnership in such a crime of espionage means taking. upon oneself a very great and pun- ishable responsibility," the broad- cast declared. The base, a joint United States- British project, will be built in northern England. It is expected to give up to six minutes warning of any rocket attack launched from the Soviet Union. LINES 2 3 4 -----, Figure 5 average words Call Classified between 1:00 and Phone NO 2-47E CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING D ial 2-6264' s t COL- R Shows at 1:00 - 3:05 5:10 - 7:15 and 9:24 FEATURE at 1:09 - 3:14 5:19 - 7:24 and 9:30 t[iLANA EFREM < AM u ONE-DAY .70 .85 1.00 SPECIAL SIX-DAY RATE .58 .70 .83 to a line 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. 86 LOST AND FOUND FOUND: Woman's watch 2vicinity 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 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 ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for rent. NO 2-1443. 017 CAMPUS-HOSPITAL--Lovely furnished apartment suitable for four girls. Parking. Cali 2-0671. C66 ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking available for summer and fall semes- ters. NO 2-1443. 016 NOW AVAILABLE - Across from East Quad: 2 parking spaces, part of an exciting apartment, and a small duck. Call NO 5-7892. C9 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 HELP WANTED HAVE SOME FUN, earn some money.1 Dancers, singers, acrobats, and so forth. Phone Mr. Green, VFW Club, NO 2-3972. H12 FULL AND PART-TIME WORK-Tele- phone operators needed to do tele- phone work for local Dry Cleaners.' Experience not necessary. Must have good voice and personality. For inter- view call 2-9546. H10 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 BUSINESS SERVICES SUMMER TUTORING-beginning and advanced French. NO 3-9420. J17 STUDENTS: Neat, expert typing of your papers, etc., pickup and delivery in. Ann Arbor. Electric typewriter. Call GL 3-6258. J6 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 J151 Hot party? There's cold pop at Ralph's to cool it off. Cool nights in the Arb? There's hot chocolate at Ralph's to warm 'em up. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Open every night till midnight! J0 FOR SALE $280 Admiral T.V. for sale. Blond 17" console-new pixtube. Will sell for only $39.00. Cali R. Berber, NO 2-5320. B6 EAST OF WASHTENAW - Vine Wood area. Excellent location, near elemen- tary school, junior high school, and campus. Three large bedrooms, living room with fireplace, sun room, gra- cious separate dining room, large kitchen with breakfast area. Base- ment recreation room. Wall-to-wall carpeting and drapes. Recently re- decorated. Garage. Immediate occu- pancy if desired. Under $30,000. Call NO 3-8221. B11 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 132 _. S71 BARGAIN CORNER BARGAIN SALE - Men's wear. ShortI sleeve sport shirts 99c and $1.50; wash 'n wear slacks $3.95; knit sport shirts $1.44 and $2.59; wash 'n wear cord pants $2.77; many other big buys. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington St. W3 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessories. 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 61 Preview of Grinnell's PIANO FESTIVAL SALE Come in any day and see these tremendous values from $399 up. GR INNELL'S 3 S. Main NO 2-5667 the home of Steinway plan- Read Daily Classifieds PERSONAL HONEST - The Towers is too sedate without the Betas, and Rands isn't nearly as swingin.'-SINCERE Flo Read the MICHIGAN DAILY for Bargain Day Specials * Thursday "DONDI" and "SERENGETI" (You can still subscribe to the summer DAILY for only $1.251) F9 - - --- 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 USED CARS '61 VW BLUE SEDAN delux with radio. Call 662-9152. N31 GRAD MIXER Friday, July 21 9-12 75c Admission VFW CLUB on East Liberty Sponsored by the Grad Student Council it a r EJtiomL./oderinioolin DIAL 5-6290 FOR THE FIRST TIME IN ANN ARBOR A Film being Held Over for a Third Week in the Summertime Dad's Love Affair became a Lauah Affair! DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .,. . " ,.. ""J:.:.::....f--1. ... The Daily Official Bulletin is an completed at least 15 hrs undergraduate /Asst. Basketball/Track Coach/S S; H S official publication of The Univer- credit or 12 hrs graduate work at U. of English; Comm.; Spec. Ed. sity of Michigan for which The M. Come in and pick up forms for reg- Midland, Mich.-Math. MichiganDaily assumes no editorial istration with either Teaching or Busi- Niles ,Mich.-Girls' P E; English. .., responsibility. Notices should be ness Divisions. Browsers welcome at Pontiac, Mich.-Vocal Music-Elem. sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to new offices in SAB, Room 3200, 8:30 to Rockford, Mich.-Elem.; Biology/Phy Room 3519 Administration Building, 12:00 and 1:30 to 4:30, Monday through sical Science. before 2 p.m., two days preceding Friday. Lifetime service available to St. Joseph, Mich.-Elein.; Librarian publication. alumni. Saugatuck, Mich. - Gen. Science, Chem./Biology; Gen. Math. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1961 PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Whitmore Lake, Mich. - Kdg.; 1st Detroit Area Trade Assn. Promotion Grade/5th/6th Grade Science/Elem. Vo Gr Fund-Recent grad. with training or cal Music/ H S Chorus; Part-time H S Genert es interest in public relations field to sus- Band; Librarian. Students, College of Engineering: The tain promotional activities of Trade Whittemore, Mich.-Jr. H S/English o: final day for DROPPING COURSES sn.on a continuing basis. This is an Gen. Science/Math. WITHOUTiECORDwll be Fri., July entirely new position-offering the op- WITHAcouTr e rportunity to gain experience in both For additional information contact the permission of the classifier after trade assn. & public relations work, the Bureau of Appointments, Educa conference with the instructor, son, Mich.-Buyer for Purchasing De tion Division, 3200 SAB, NO 3-1511, Ex Walker Manufacturing Co., Jackson, 3549. Doctoral Foreign Language Reading Mich.-Buyer for Purchasing Dept.- to 'Examination: The last doctoral foreign purchase materials required in mfgrg. language reading examinations for the processes of firm's products. Recent summer session will be given on Mon., grad with background in sales, acctg.,m lyEn Aug. 7. Since facilities for the exam- marketing & finance. One-two yrs. work nations are limited, it will be wise for experience desirable but not required. The following part-time jobs an befoe thesloswishinbhe su e smin DPlease2contact Bureau of Appts. Gen'1 available. Applicationscan be made i befor the closoonthesummosssibl on Div~, 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for further 2200 SAB Monday through Friday, 8 :00 to sign up as soon as possible for a information, am, to 12:30 p.m. specific examination date. Contact the.am. es .. Foreign Language Examiner, 3028 Rack- TEACHER PLACEMENT Employers desirous of hiring part ham Bldg., Office hours: Mon., 2:15- The following schools still have va- time or temporary employes should con 30 Tues., 0-915 d.1:0-2:3;cancies on their teaching staff for the tact Jack Lardie at NO -3-1511, Ext. 3T3;hues.,:0-r,9:;We.,10:30-230;1961-62 school year. 3553. Thurs., 2:15-3:30; Fri., 9:00-10:15. Belleville, Mich -Elem. (1st grade); Students desiring miscellaneous job: Sp. Corr.; Vocal Music; 7th Grade math/ should consult the bulletin board in EF iScience; English/SS; Vocal Music; 8th Rm. 2200, daily. Events Friday Grade Math; H S Physics; Algebra/ MALE Educational Film Preview: "Face of Geometry; English 12; Typing/ Gen. 1-Married couple, no children, be- the High Arctic" and "Seven Cities of Bus, tween 25-30 years of age, to super- Antarctica" will be shown on Fri., July Redford Union (Detroit) Mich.-8th/ vise children, live in, premanen1 21 a 2 p.m. In the Schorling Aud., Uni- 9th Grade English/French. position. versity School. Waterford Township (Pontiac), Mich. 4 Salesmen, commission basis, must __sy____ -Girls PE; 8th Grade Math; 7th Grade have car. Astronomy Department Visitors' Night Language Arts/SS. 55-Psychological subjects, several one is Fri., July 21, 8:30 p.m., 2003 Angell Dearborn Township No. 7 (Dearborn, hour experiments, Hall. Dr. George Z. Dimitroff, Visiting 1 1ih-Kdg., Early Elem. 3Slsesligmgzn u Lecturer, Dartmouth College, will speak Berrien Springs, Mich-HS Chem/ scriptions, commission basis. on "This is Astronomy." After the lec- Physicshi FEMALE ture the fifth floor Student Observatory I Big Rapids, Mich.-Vocational Home 1-Married couple, no children, be- will be open for inspection and for Ec., History/English/or History/Math. tween 25-30 years of age, to super. telescopic observations of the Moon, Boyne City, Mich.-Elem.; H.S. Math; vise children, live in, permanent a double star, and Saturn. Children Foreign Languages; Librarian, position. weme, but m t be accompai Lawrence, Mich. Foreign Language 2-Saleswomen, selling magazine sub- adults. wloebtms eacmaidb Jr. High Subjects; Girls PE/ Jr. High scriptions, commission basis. a _._Subject; Sixth Grade. 14-Psychological subjects, several one. Marlette, Mich.-H S Guidance; 9th hour experiments. Placem ent Grade Algebra/ Gen. Math/ History or ,1I: 3 Gen. Science. Registration with Bureau of Appoint- Marshall, Mich-. Early elem; Girl's ments-Placement services available to P E. all juniors, seniors or grads who have Memphis, Mich.-Elem.; Head Football{ foryour entertainment ... The V.F.W. BARGAIN DAYS at FOLLETT'S 25% off on KODAK FILM MICHIGAN 322 South State $!reet Don't let mid-summer Ann Arbor drive you buggy - TONIGHT-see I[SKE Bob Graham, Mgr, THE BEDBUG 8:00 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre It's Vladimir Mayakovsky's biting satire on Communist society. Box office open 10 A.M. 'til curtain time. Ciem TONIGHT and Saturday at 7 and 9 DE SICA'S "THE BICYCLE THIEF" Lomberto Maggiorani, Enzo Stiaola No. 3 of Best Films of All Times - f ON FOREST off corner of S. University opp. Campus Theatre round the corner rom Art Street Fair I i w - - e% ^ ^ i -.L!I L . . W .* Im. LL..