F__THEMICHIGAN DAILY LEGE ROUNDUP: J' of Washington Sets dmission Requirement .. ., i CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING By JEAN SPENCER SEATTLE--University of Wash- gton Regents last week con- rmed an admissions p o l i c y iange that will require a 2.5 high hool grade average for enter- g freshmen, effective 1964. A faculty-administrative ad hoc. )mmittee drafted the change ter 18 months of study. At least specified units of college pre- aratory subjects will also be re- uired. The committee reported re- arch citing the high school ade average as the most accu- Lte single indication of perform- ice in college-only one out of n students averaging under 2.5 . high school remains in college nger than six quarters, they und. In presenting the revisions to )orms Full At Berkeley By FAITH WEINSTEIN Special to The Daily San Francisco-The University of California at Berkeley is pres- ently facing an "ominous" stu- dent housing crisis, part of their share of the nationwide problems of coping with the recent sharp increase in college students. More than 3000 students have been turned down for residence hall housing, university officials announced to the San Francisco press recently, and hundreds more are expected before fall. "We are trying to help the stu- dents not able to be accommo- dated in the university residence halls to find housing elsewhere," Ruth N. Donnelly, supervisor of housing services at Berkeley said rather desperately. "We are now taking listings of accommodations in the area, list- ings of rooms in private houses, apartments , . .'' Problem Mushrooms But meanwhile, the problem grows, as university enrollment is scheduled for an increase from about 19,000 last year to a maxi- mum of 28,500 by 1965, according to a decision of the university re- gents last week. Chances that residence halls will be able to house the influx of new students appear to be slim, according to Dean of Students William F. Shepard, becatse of scarcity of funds. Present housing units accommodate 2500 students, with only 750 vacancies fo^ the fall. For the time being, unsuccess- ful applicants for university hous- ing are being advised that they can, if they wish, go to the uni- versity's Davis or Riverside cam- pus, where limited living space is still available. Creates Furor In San Francisco this an- nouncement has created quite a furor. A local columnist reported that a local high school graduate who plans to attend the university, this fall was sent a letter last week, telling him to "reply by re- turn mail" if he wanted a room in a dormitory. He did so, only to find that all places had been filled-by students from Los Angeles. According to the story, the reason behind this was that re- turn mail came from Los Angeles by jet-and got to Berkeley in a shorter time than it took the San Francisco mail to get across the bay. the Regents, President Charles E. Odegaard remarked that the "hu- man cost in frustration and dis- appointment to a student who has failed" is perhaps greater than the financial cost of student failures to the university and state. * * * BOULDER-A new N a t i o n a l Center for Atmospheric Research, endowed by the National Science Foundation and the University of Colorado Corporation on Atmos- pheric Research, will be located somewhere in Colorado. Walter Orr Roberts, recently appointed director of the center, commented, "The key to the suc- cess of any research center is the recruitment of key scientific staff members. My goal is to select and employ eight to 10 scientists rep- resenting competence in meteor- ology and atmospheric science. The composition of the staff may involve 30 to 50 per cent of sci- entists outside the meteorology field." In discussing the future plans of the center, once its staff and facilities are organized, Orr said it will be interested in "atmos- pheric control, but the goal of the center is to understand the atmosphere. It will not be pri- marily concerned with the specif- ics such as weather forecasting or weather control." The four principle research areas for the center are atmos- pheric motion, energy exchange process in the atmosphere, water substance in the atmosphere and physical phenomena in the at- mosphere. * * * COLUMBUS - Registrar Ken- neth B. Varner of Ohio State Uni- versity recently discussed elim- inating the traditional summer vacation in favor of vacations staggered over three academic quarters Theoretically the university could operate at full capacity with 30,000 to 40,000 students in at- tendance each quarter while 10,- 000 more vacation. Thus univer- sity facilities would be fully util- ized and cost would be kept down, he remarked. The largest sum- mer enrollment in ten years has stimulated serious speculation on the year-round plan, with over 8,000 at the university this sum- mer. Verner cited tradition as the main drawback to conversion to the year-round educational schedule. Whitehouse To Lecture Dr. William Whitehouse, presi- dent of Albion College, will give a summer session lecture on "Eco- nomic Change and Higher Educa- tion" at 4:10 p.m. Wednesday in Aud. A, Angell Hall. He will also address the Ann Arbor Rotary Club. Whitehouse has served as dean of liberal arts at Wayne State University. He received his doctorate from North- western Michigan and holds hon- orary degrees from the University, Michigan State, Wayne State and Ohio Wesleyan University. He is chairman of the Board of Trustees of Citizens Research Council of Michigan. In 1958 he was President of the Association of American Colleges and has held numerous national and state posi- tions, including membership on the executive committee of the -Daily-Allan Winder SUMMER HOUSE-August and patient, the empty fraternity house holds its breath through hot Ann Arbor summer before chapter members arrive to begin autumn activities. 'AMPHITRYON 38': Play Adapts Romantic, Myth By JUDITH OPPENHEIM "Amphitryon 38" which opens at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, is a play which must be seen from the beginning. The opening scene finds Jupiter, king of the gods, relaxing on the clouds and gazing down at his latest love, Alkmena, on Earth. The play (pronounced aam-FIH- tree-uhn) is the second in the Playbill Summer 1960 series. It is directed by Prof. Hugh Z. Norton of the speech department, with scenery and costumes by Ralph W. Duckwall, Jr. of the speech de- partment. Greek Myth The story of Amphitryon was an old 'Greek legend, which French playwright Jean Girau- doux has revised. Giraudoux claims that his story is the 38th version of the original legend; hence, the name of the play. Actually, in adapting the Girau- doux play to English, S. N. Behr- man added his own touches to the comedy making it the 39th ver- sion, if Giraudoux's calculations are correct. The story deals with Amphi- tryon, a Theban warrior who is sent off to war to give Jupiter a chance to assume his form and make love to his faithful wife, Alkmena. Difficulties follow when Jupiter assumes a human shape, because he has trouble thinking like a man. New Slant Giraudoux's play is streamlined mythology with a cunning new slant on how the Olympian god wooed and won the beautiful chaste mortal. The French novelist and playwright uses the drama to make intriguing comments on the advantages and disadvantages of being with gods or men. The rela- tionships among gods, men and women is an important theme. The play will run from Wednes- day through Saturday. Season tickets for the four remaining shows of the Playbill, which after "Amphitryon 38" include Shale- speare's "As You Like It," William Inge's "Picnic," and Mozart's opera "Don Giovanni" are avail- able, in addition to single tickets for all the playbill summer pro- ductions. Tickets may be obtained at the box office of the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre which is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, and until 8 p.m. on performance dates. The office will be closed this Monday for the July 4th holiday. FOR RENT LEASE to organized group, 20 to 30 students. 1026 Oakland. See by appt. only. NO 5-5291. C24 SINGLE ROOM for gentleman in best Southeast residential section. NO 8-6171. C23 CAMPUS: 2 bedrm. furnished, near Law School. Deluxe with air conditioner, TV outlets, all new furnishings. Twin beds with hotel deluxe innerspring and mattress. Off-street parking pro- vided: No vacancies at present, but Sept. assignments now being taken. NO 2-7787 days, NO 2-4351 evenings. 022 PLEASANT ROOM for bus. or college women. For summer or fall. Near the bus line. Breakfast privileges. $7.50 a week. Phone NO 8-6551. C20 RECREATION ROOM for rent facing Huron River. 1 miles from campus. To young, refined married couple only. Phone after 6 P.M. or before 10 A.M., NO 3-5126. 017 GOOD STUDENT apartments close to campus at 344 S. Division. Phone Mr. Pray. F. A. Sergeant Co. Realtors, NO 2-3259. C12 NEAR ST. JOSEPH'S. Three rooms, fur- nished. Private bath. NO 2-5776, eve- nings NO 2-5140. 'C1 CAMPUS - Clean furnished bachelor apartment, $75. Three room apart- ment, $95. 614 Monroe. NO 3-5224. C2 REAL ESTATE STOP and SEE 1804 Cooley Ave. $16,500 By owner, three yr. old, three bedroom ranch. Slate entry, large living room, dining area, tile bath. Aluminum storms, screens, gutters. Shrubs and flowers. Lot 53x70x101x150 on quiet dead end street one block from Wines and For- sythe schools. 1804 Cooley Ave. NO 3-6551. SEE IT TODAY!! R 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 service-mechanio on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get t" 1220 S. Unversity at Forest NO 8-9168 81 WHITE'S AUTO SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 S2 USED CARS AN ECONOMICAL barrel of fun. Red Isetta cony, R&H. Low mileage. Ex- cellent condition. NO 3-0302. N6 '52 FORD 2-dr. coupe; excellent trans- portation. Radio, new tires. $125. NO 2-2110. N4 1948 PONTIAC. Great trans. R. & H. Highest offer takes it. NO 2-3061. N3 CLEAN '54 Volkswagon. Sunroof. New WSW tires, safety belts, radio. NO 3-3893. N TRANSPORTATION RIDERS wanted to Cape Cod area; leaving June 30, returning July 4. Call NO 2-3241; after 5, NO 8-6101. GI Haber Forecasts Recession, Seeks Unemployment Study NES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY - 80 .96 1.12 SPECIAL TEN -DAY RATE 39 .47 «54. Figure 5 overage words to a line. Call Classified between J:00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. and 9:00 and 11:30' Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786 Warning that a recession "defi- nitely appears to be in the mak- ing," Prof. William Haber of the economics department suggested a Presidential commission to reap- praise the nation's unemployment system Thursday at a convention in Colorado Springs. PROF. WILLIAM HABER .. . predicts recession D AILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ."The end of each recession in the post-war period has left us with a higher percentage of job- lessness," he said, advocating pre- paredness. Haber is senior mem- ber and former chairman of the Federal Advisory Council on Em- ployment Security. "After the 1949 recession, un- employment averaged three per cent; after 1954, four per cent; and now, after 1958, we appear to accommodate ourselves with five per cent average unemployment. The end of the next recession, which some expect in 1960-61, is likely to leave us with six or even seven per cent unemployed," he explained. Criticism Widespread Haber discussed "widespread, criticism" of the present unem- ployment system in use for 25 years. He said labor unions contend' that benefits are too' low, that the duration of benefits is too short, and that too many workers are improperly disqualified from bene- fit rights altogether. Management complains that costs are too high and that in cer- tain states (e.g. Michigan) the burden of unemployment insur- ance costs has unfavorable conse- quences to inter-state competition, he continued. Raps Stopgaps :saber warned against "pallia- tives, designed only to deal with one grievance or gap," in pro- posed changes in the federal pro- gram. iie called for "thorough, patient and objective" reevalua- tion as opposed to piece-meal handling of the problem. "The time for reappraisal is now, not when we are in the midst of the next recession and have no choice but emergency and tempo- rary measures," he stressed. Haber is co-author of a major new study of unemployment which will be published Sunday. To Evaluate Use of Theme The English department will sponsor a discussion on "Evalu- ating the Theme" at 4 p.m. Tues- day in Aud. C, Angell Hall. Members of the panel will in- clude Ruth L. Chamberlain, Wa- terford Township High School; Beverly Arment, Mt. Pleasant Junior High School; Carl G. Wonnberger, Cranbrook School, Bloomfield Hills; and James W. Downer of the University English department. BARGAIN CORNER MEN'S short-sleeve sport, shirt $1.25. Skip-dents & seer-suckers sanforized wash & wear, asstd. colors. Sam's Store 122 E. Washington Wi PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL interview with physi- cian, nurse, marriage counselor con- cerningebirth control, child spacing, marriage problems. Planned Parent- hood clinic, Tuesday, Thursday, 7:30 P.M. to 9 P.M. 122 North Fourth Ave. Fees based on family income. P12 A VICTORIA, British Columbia, pet owner advertised: "Pups for sale, $10. Mother small cocker, father a dog." F27 WANTED: MALE SUBJECTS For psychological experiment $1.25 an hour Call Extension 2616 Ask for Mrs. Collins. P28~ HE WHO LAUGHS LAST HAD TO HAVE IT EXPLAINED, --Changing Times P29 YOU CAN NOW buy a leather-covered toilet seat, decorated with your own coat of arms, for about $48. P26 GREAT SAVINGS-all Magazine subs. 1 yr.: Time-$3.87, Newsweek-$3.50, Life & Spts. Illustrated-$4.00. Special Student Rates. NO 2-3061. F18 STUDENTS -WANTED To take part in psychological ex- periments. $1.25 per hour; apply at 1020 Administration Building. P14 BUSINESS SERVICES ALTERATIONS and REPAIRS Laundry and Dry Cleaning Harriet's Haven 1025 E. Ann NO 5-5915 Jl REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop, 224 Nickels Arcade, NO 2-4647. J4 MAYNARD & SEEGER WELDERS and BLACKSMITHING 109 South Ashley NO 8-7403 J5 FOR 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 deli- cious foods. 300 S. Thayer NO 2-250C Complete line of Hi F components including kits; complete servio on radios, phonographs and Hi F1 equipments. HI Fl STUDIO 1317 South University 1 block east at Campus Theatre X2 PIANOS-ORGANS NEW & USED Ann Arbor Piano & Organ Co. 213 E. Washington NO 3-3109 Si A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-18M X3 x Grinnell's Music Festival Pianos NOW ON SALE More than 30 styles and finishes to select from. SAVE UP TO 185 NEW SPINET PIANO $479 USED PIANO SPECIALS Grands from............... $ 288 Uprights from..............$ 49 Spinet, floor sample.........$ 395 Baldwin Grand, electric player $1,200 Chickering Grand...........$ 895 Grinnell upright............$ 195 Trade-In Accepted - Low Budget Terms Grinnel lS 323 S. Main St. X4 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS Expert Service on RECORD PLAYERS TAPE RECORDERS Hl-FI COMPONENTS MUSIC CENTER RALPH'S 709 Packard MARKET NO 5-7131 Ji1 Michigan State on Education. House ConferenceI UWWI DIAL NO 8-6416 1 , { Continuous Saturday 4 Sunday ond July 4th TWO INGMAR BERGMAN CLASSICS START SUNDAY "'THE MAGICIAN' is full of extraordinary thrills that flow and collide on several levels of emotion and intellect. Supremely contemplative, eerie and Rabelaisian. ,. rich in comedy and melodrama as well as deep philosophical thought and wonderful in its graphic details. .. it is a thoroughly exciting film." -Bosley Crowther, N.Y. Times "A Masterpiece. nothing' short of miraculous . .'. all of Bergman's skills are on view in The Magician' which all in all is a superb motion picture." -The New Yorker (Continued from Page 2) should have fiverormore years ex- perience, with graduate degree. Sys- tems Engineer with three or more years experience. Engineers (Mechanical, Electrical, Physics.) Statistical Analyst, background in statistics and probabil- ity theory. Computer Facility .Manager. State of Florida. Have opening in the Florida Insurance Department for a life actuary. City of Detroit. We have the current listing of continuing examinations for positions with the City, ranging from typist through engineers, city planners, social economists, social workers, psy- chologists, art curators, historical museumtassistant,to a supervisor of a canning factory. State of Connecticut, has an open- ing for a Correction Officer. City of Flint, has a vacancy in Parks and Recreation Department for a Land- scape Architect. Direct Planning, New York, has need for foreign students to represent this broker/dealers in the sale of American mutual funds in Europe and Latin America. Department of the Navy. We have re- ceived a listing of jobs from the Dept. of the Navy. If you are interested in knowing more about positions avail- able, contact the Bureau of Appoint- ments. Eastern Illinois University. Food Pro- duction Manager. Bachelor's degree, plus three years experience. Assistant Food Production Manager. Grad with one year's work in food supervision. Dow Chemical Company, Midland. Position in Advertising Department. trainee in exhibit and display section. Grad, who has completed military ser- vice. Food Machinery and Chemical Corp. Two grad M.E.'s or A.E.'s with two or three years' experience and who have completed military service. Hoopeston, Ill. Midwest Business Machines Manu- facturer has immediate opening for an Audio Visual Specialist-still photogra- pher-director-producer. General Mills, Inc. Minneapolis. Po- sition in Product and Application De- velopment Group, man with five or more years experience, good academic background, probably in Biochemistry. Merchants Creamery Co., Cincinnati. Grad with experience to supervise creamery operations. Armstrong, Lancaster, Pa. Openings in Accounting, advertising, promotion n'' r ''~'~'4 -1)lio rla.++nftft 'flfl w iteric Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Physics, Textile Engineering. Also open- ing in Economic and Marketing Re- serach Department, M.B.A. with some courses in statistics. Also position in Credit Department, M.B.A. or business grad. W.R. Grace & Co., Research Division, Clarksville, Marland. Pliymerchemists, physical chemists, physicists, mathe- matics, analytical chemists, inorganic chemist. Biaw-Knox Co. Pittsburgh. Jr. En- or C.E., Structural Engineers, five to gineer, C.E. or M.E., Sales Engineer, prefer M.E., Product Supervisor, M.E. or C.E., Structural Englneers, five to ten years experience. Piping engineers, five-ten years experience. Long Beach State College, California. Administrative 'Assistant to the Dean of Students, M.A. with background in personnel preferred, with active un- dergraduate participation in student organizations. Admissions Officer. B.A. with some grad, work. Year's experience as Registrar or in Student Personnel. Student Activities Advisor. Master's de- gree preferred, with active undergrad- uate participation in student organi- nations. For further information, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 4021 Admin. Bldg., ext. 3371. 0 vmm qF i Aft Read Daily Classifieds 'Fountain Pen Sales 24-Hour Service on Repairs MORRI LL'S I 314 S. State St. YOU'LL BE ABLE TO SEE REAL GHOSTS a THROUGH MY GHOST-VIEWER. FREE TO EVERYONE AT THIS MOVIE!!! NO 3-2481 J2 :TPA4 Organzatioln Notices July 2, 1960 Lutheran Student Center and Chapel, Picnic and Swimming, July 3, 3 p.m., Meet at Center, 801 S. Forest Ave. ENDING TONIGHT Bz8 WUDFR SkEA D T AND "Mam own & mm . * "1 f7 I - NOW DIAL NO 2-6264 jZPI2~~ g'g LATE SHOW TONIGHT } x jftt I x4Il INGMAR BERGMAN'S m nsadgm Effam ' ME I" "71"Al 1 I M K m-_ _ __ -.-i1160 Y Ftit:,AV 1nHVKj'r Cm lUtit 1 I I I