I THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ity Approves Plan or Industrial Park - _ At its meeting Wednesday night, the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce announced its plans to acquire a 209.8 acre site in Pitts- field township, and develop it into an industrial park for research and light industry. Chamber of Commerce officials believed that the research park, once it is developed with water and sewer lines, streets and other facilities, will encourage industry to locate here-, Would Create Opportunities The park would create job op- portunities, increase local pros- perity, and spread the cost of government more evenly between industrial, commercial and resi- dential property owners, they be- lieve. Development and management of the park, which is the 'first in- stallation of its kind in the Great Lakes area, will be vested with the Greater Ann Arbor Research Park, Inc., a non-profit subsidiary which is to be organized by the Chamber of Commerce and ad- ministered by officials of that group. The key figures in developing the park were Charles A. Hoff- man, Chamber of Commerce pres- ident, and Thomas L, Dickenson and Lawrence H. Quimet, co- chairmen of the Chamber's Eco- nomic Development Committee, along with William J. Bott, Chamber of Commerce manager. Outline Plan They outlined the plan to the council and asked for study of the possibility of city participa- tion in extending water and sew- age lines to the park. They also said that it would be necessary to annex a 370-acre tract on the east side of state Street in order to make the park a part of the city of Ann Arbor. Ouimet pointed out that of the 13 property owners in this tract, 10 are willing to sign a petition for annexation. This addition to the 209-acre park sight is neces- sary under city policy. Without it, utilities cannot be installed. Vote Pending The council is expected to vote within 30 days on a supplemental agreement which/ would bind the city to provide utilities. The vote pends a study on the cost of such utilities. Under the agreement, which is part of an option to be signed by the owners of the site and the Chamber of Commerce officials, the city will provide utilities to the park. This could be accom- plished without charge to city - taxpayers, since it would be done on a self-liquidating basis. The Chamber of Commerce will : purchase the park site at $2,500 per acre, as it receives fees from incoming industries. The price of utilities, overhead, and other im- provements will be added to this per-acre fee to determine the price which new industries will pay for the developed land. Price Not Set Yet No price has been established yet, but Dickinson said that land in the park may sell for between $7,000 and $8,000 per acre. Plans for the park took nearly four years of study by the Cham- ber of Commerce and hundreds of hours of work. The Economic" Development Committee, of which city Mayor Cecil 0. Creal is a member, recognized what was termed, "the Joint efforts of a large number of civic-minded people who have devoted count- less hours of time in developing plans for the research park." The committee then went on to say that the realization of the project would help secure the future of a "greater Ann Arbor area" and truly stamp the com- munity as the "ResearchhCenter of the Midwest." The committee listed five major considerations in their acquiring of the land for the park. These were: 1) accessibility to trans- portation; 2) terrain; 3) proxim- ity to existing city sewers; 4) cost of making improvements; and 5) price of the raw land and its availability over an extended per- iod of time. Confident Of Value Speaking of the park, Univer- sity President Harlan Hatcher said: "I am confident that the re- search park proposed by the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce will be of tremendous value to the city and state, and to the nation' as well. It is a logical develop- ment in the light of the increas- ing emphasis on space-age tech- nology and particularly with re- search now playing such a critical role in our chances of survival. "Ann Arbor is a natural focus for a development of this kind . . . Already we have in our city anM unusual concentration of men and' minds working on exciting new frontiers in many fields. A syste- matic land development such as the research park will attract. more industries and men to in- crease our present' research po- tential. "We are fortunate in Ann Ar- bor to have the men and organi- zations with the energy and fore-I sight to bring about such a plan. I We commend them. The Univer- sity of Michigan welcomes the new Research Park and pledges it our full co-operation and sup- port," he concluded. APPREHENSIVE-Cadets at Fort Riley ROTW Summer Camp prepare for their first practical lesson in Army routine. Cadets Learn Army Routine .At Summer Camp Session The first two weeks of ROTC' summer camp at Fort Riley, Kan. hav ebeen completed, and the 1,321 Cadets from the 5th U.S. Army Area are hoping that the worst of it is over. The Cadets arrived at 5 a.m. June 18, and two days later, their administrative and physical pro- cessing was finished. In their pri- mary adjustment to Army life, they began by exchanging their sport shirts and bermuda shorts for Army fatigues, and acquired short haircuts. Barracks Life The first introduction to bar- racks living also occurred that weekend and included learning to make up an Army bunk. The highlight of the first week was a talk by Major General T. W. Parker on June 20 welcoming the Cadets to Fort Riley for the six-week Summer Camp and stressing the importance of the success of this training mission. At the opening ceremony, Cadet Henry M. Derleth, University of Wisconsin junior acted as Regi- mental Commander of the Cadet Corps and accepted the NationalI and ROTC Colors from Colonelk William J. McConnell, professor of military science at Colorado State- University, and Deputy Camp Commander of the Summer Camp. All Cadets then moved immedi- ately to various training areas and soon realized the training would be both rugged and intensive. They have received a thorough orientation by the U.S. Army Ag- gressor Center. Fort Riley, and realize that the Aggressor will be participating in the role of op- posing troops in many of the training exercises, particularly those occurring at night. The Cadets, who are from 40 diffreent colleges and universities, have also moved into other phases of their training, including over- night bivouacs, firing on the M-1 range, mine warfare, signal com- munications, map and compass practical exercises, and leading of small units in combat. Hardening Muscles Their sore but slowly hardening muscles attest to their physical conditioning program which in- cludes calesthenics, double timing and various sports. Pull-ups, for instance, are done before each meal on bars placed at the en- trance to the mess halls. Upon completion of the camp, 91 of the Cadets will be commis- sioned as 2nd Lieutenants in the Regular Army or the U.S. Army Reserve. The rest will receive their commissions upon graduation from their respective colleges and uni- versities. THE PROMETHEAN (Ann Arbor's only Espresso Cafe) 508 East William open 2 P.M.-2 A.M. Entertainment Friday, Saturday Services Held l For Student Funeral services were held yes- terday in Richmond, Va., for Peggy Greenberg, '62, a former member of the Daily editorial staff. Miss Greenberg died Tuesday in the Richmond Medical Center, where she had been hospitalized since she was stricken last Aug- ust while attending Radcliffe summer school at Cambridge, Mass. She Joined The Daily in her freshman year and was affiliated with Alpha Epsilon Phi Sorority. The nature of her illness was not disclosed. I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 11 N = Placement Notices (Continued from Page 2) City of Rockford, Ill., Health Direc- tor, M.D. with training and experience in public health. Sanitary Engineer, equivalent to M.S. in sanitary of public health engineering. General Dynamics Corp. Chicago. pro- ject engineers. Grad Chem. Eng. with 5-10 years experience. Reeve Darling & Associates, Pasadena. Power Supply Design and Development Spvr., Servo Mechanisms Design Spvr., Servo-Merchanism Design Eng., Section Spvr., Digital Data Processing and Dis- play, Project Mgr., Airborne Infra-Red Research & Develop. Section, Tech. Spe- cialist Airborne Infra-Red Systems, En- gineers, Potentiometer Design Eng. ,Sr. Circuit Design Eng., Section Spvr., Sales Mgr. Electronic Systems, Division Gen. Mgr. and Vice-Pres. Division of General Motors, Flint. jobs in: Market Analysis, Training- Production Control, Training-Production. Supervision, Engineers, Project Engi- neers, Chemist, Packaging Engineer, Research Chemist. Frick Co., Waynesboro, Penn., Sr. Refrigeration Traininig Course, must have B.S.M.E., E.E. or equivalent. State of Connecticut. Accountants, Highway Junior Engineer, Civil Defense Metropolitan Target Area Commander. B. F. Goodrich, Chemist and Chemi- cal Engineers, Product Development (B.S. in Residential Building or engin- eering plus some experience in produce development of Building materials, al- so B.S. or M.S. in Chem. no experience necessary), Mechanical Engineer (2-5 yrs. experience), Technical research, Senior Marketing Analyst (age 30-45), sales. City of New York, Alphabetic Key Punch Operator (IBM), Assistant Ar- chitect, Civil Engineering Draftsman, Numeric Key Punch Operator (IBM) Stenographer, Tabulator Operator (IB- M) Transcribing Typist, Typist. Sessions Engineering Company, Min- neapolis. Consulting Management En- gineers. Eng. degree, minimum of five years experience in Methods, Work Measurements, Systems and Procedures, Electronic Computer Applications, Ad- ministrative Control, Organization Planning and Organization Analysis, with 2-5 years in Methods and Work Measurements. Corporation in Detroit, position in Technical Service Laboratories, grad with B.S. in Chemistry. YWCA, Lansing, Special Programs Di- rector, woman. MSW in Group Work. Previous work with children, prefer- ably with behaviour problems. For further information, contact the Bureau of Appointments, Room 4021, ext. 3371. loco I EVERETT'S DRIVE-IN Home of the California Deluxeburger ANN ARBOR'S MOST POPULAR DRIVE-IN 2280 West Stadium I 11 U 11 I ENDS FRIDAY t k DIAL NO 5-6290 3YIgEE C f GEI TH K r.aawa ' 21w F i RUTH Elmo- 2cr l Saturday: "13 GHOSTS" - -DIAL NOW NO 2-6264 EDNA4ERBE R:. GR AT B cE$sLCt. I i i II - 1960.BTH ATHOR uanuu , V ~~i~rim I I