fTHE MICHIGAN DAILY .4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FROM WEST BERLIN: Exchange Student Views Native Land -WOOMBOM% i~flwr (Continued from Page 4) Placement Notices Studebaker - Packard Corp., South Bend, Ind.-Attention seniors: Oppor- tunities for college graduates in Ac- counting, Engineering, Manufacturing, Sales and general Business Administra- tion fields. Inquiries welcome. Continental Consultants, Inc., Profes- sional Personnel in Electronics--Bryn Mawr, Pa.-Continuous need for quali- fled professional personnel as follows: Engineers, Economists, Teachers, Math- ematicians, Physicists, Psychologists, Technical Writers, etc. Experience re- quired; nationwide branch offices. Kimberly-Clark Corp. ,Wisc.-Several openings for Consumer Products sales- men in Detroit area. Recent Liberal '~Arts or Bus. Admin. graduates, men. Please phone Mr. G. J. Bump at W od- ward 3-6000, Detroit, after 1:00 p.m., Wednesday, Oct. 5 to arrange for in- terview on Oct. 6 or 7 at Statler Hilton Hotel. No sales experience required. Gerber Baby Foods, Fremont, Mich.- Seeking 1 or 2 trainees for Auditing and Accounting Depts., leading to per- manent positions. B.B.A. or B.A. with accounting major. Please call Bureau or Appointments, Rm h4021,.nAdm inBldg., Ext. 3371 for further information. Student Part-Time The following part-time jobs are available to students. Applications for these jobs can be made in the Non- Academic Personnel Office, Room 1020 Administration Building, during the following hours: Monday through Fri- day, 8:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring students for part-time work should contact Bill Wenrich, Student Interviewer at NOr- mandy 3-1511, extension 2939. Students desiring miscellaneous odd jobs should consult the bulletin board in Room 1020, daily. MALE 15-Psychological subjects. 3--Salesmen-graduate students pre-. ferred, commission basis. 2-Married couples to live in, in ex- change for room and board. 1-Mealjob 1--Waiter (Start Oct. 5, evenings, 10- 25 hours per week). 1-Busboy (Start Oct. 5, evenings, 10- 25 hours per week). 1-Pianist (Thursday, Friday, Satur- day evenings). 5-Cab drivers-evenings and week- ends. 25-Psychological subjects (Any Tues- day or Thursday afternoons). 1-Counter clerk (4-9 p.m. alternate days). 1--Sociology or Psychology major (eve- nings and weekends, live in). FEMALE 12-Guides-upperclass biological st-' ence majors $3.00 per hr. 1-Room job. 1-Telephone solicitor (as many hours as possible) 3-Housework and ironing (hours flex- ible). 1-Waitress (Start Oct. 5, evenings, 10- 25 hours per week). 1-Instructor-receptionist (5 p.m.-6 p.m. then 7 p~m.-iO p.m.). 15-Psychology subjects. 25-Psychological subjects (Any Tues- day or Thursday afternoon). 1-Laundry assistant (7:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays only). 1-Reader (2-5 p.m. Tuesday only). PAPER-BOUND BOOKS 50 Publishers Represented PROMPT SERVICE On Special Orders OVERBECKS BOOKSTORE For RESULTS Read and Use Daily Classifieds By SUSAN HERSHBERG "In West Berlin, it is very right and definitelymuch alive," said ibylle Arnolds, exchange student, her eyes sparkling. Coming from West Berlin to visit the United States, Miss Ar- nolds holds a year's scholarship from Delta Gamma sorority and a tuition grant from the Univer- sity. She has always been interested in America. "It's a young country. It's an honest country," Miss Ar- nolds explained. She received the University-sponsored scholarships through her own school, the Free University of West Berlin. Met Touring Lewis When she was under considera- tion for the exchange program, University vice-president Lewis and his wife were touring Europe. Miss Arnolds was invited to a tea in their honor in her capacity as chairman of her school's branch of the U.S. exchange com- mittee. Actually, she smiled, she was being tested for her fitness as a diplomat. Apparently, she pass- ed. The university where Miss Ar- nolds studies law was founded ten years ago by students who fled East Berlin for academic freedom. Even today, 40% to 50% of the students are East Germans who have fled from behind the Iron Curtain. There is no student di- rectory. '"They will never give away addresses, because of spies," remarked Miss Arnolds. Communists Nearby The nearness of a Communist satellite is manifest in many ways. One day the Communist flag was hoisted in West Berlin over the elevated railroad station. This railroad line is East Berlin owned. and the West Berliners raised a commotion until the police insist- ed the sign be removed. "They always come up with' things that seem small-just to get people nervous," said Miss Ar-' nolds. However,'"They want us to get scared, so we don't." Miss Arnolds explained that a West Berliner cannot go to East Germany "unless you can prove you have a close relative lying on her deathbed. Then you can apply for a visa." The only ways out are the Autobahn highway and special trains. Railway Joins Sectors The elevated railway will takey people from West to East Berlin. Even so, "I personally don't go1 there too often, because it's too depressing," said Miss Arnolds. In East Berlin, the only new buildings are on one street, the1 "showcase." People will not talkd very much. Since she left, Miss Arnolds has heard that a visa of West Germans is now requiredI CARLOS MO TOYA Ann Arbor High Fri. Oct. 7 8:30 P.M. WEST GERMAN-Sibylle Arnolds, at the University on a Delta Gamma sorority scholarship, described life in West Berlin for The Daily. She noted the contrast between the free and Commu- nist sectors of the city., FOR RENT FIVE-ROOM heated apt., 2 baths. Farm nine miles from campus. Swimming, fishing, horseback riding. $80. NO 3-6578. C40 WOMEN: Very large furnished room at Whitmore Lake. Boat beach, and kitcherpriveleges. Transportationto Ann Arbor can be arranged to fit most any schedule, Call HI 9-2387 after 3 p.m. C37 TWO-ROOM furnished apt, with pri- vate bath. Everything included except gas for cooking. $65 a month. NO 2-0342 after 5. C41 ATTENTION: Price reduced to $85., Campus four room furnished apart- ment. Suitable for 2 or 3. NO 3-4322. C33'i ATT; Apt. facing Huron River, 1%! mile from campus. Available to young, refined couple. NO 3-4126. C361 APARTMENT FOR three boys. Located on Hill St. Furnished, and all utilities paid. Call NO 8-9538 and after 8 p.m. NO 2-3512. C-32 LARGE single room near North Cam- pus. $8. HU 2-4959. C28 A GIRL to share ground floor apt. Newly furnished, walking distance to campus. Reasonable. NO 8-8634. C43 HOUSE-2 bedroom. New oil furnace. Newly decorated. Furnished or unfur- nished. $75 per month. Off Highway 23 between Ann Arbor and Brighton. EL 6-8995. C25 ONE BLOCK from campus - Modern apartment. Newly furnished. NO 2- 1443. C10 PARKING SPACE and garage. One block from campus. 514 S. Forest. Phone NO 2-1443. C8 FOR SALE HOTPOINT PORTABLE TV, only four years old. Call NO 3-0846. B32 FRENCH HORN: LidlI (Czechoslovakt- an) Post War model..Will bargain. C all Charlie. NO 2-8575. B13 FOR SALE-Warm, red gabardine coat. Fur lined, almost new. NO 8-6064. B31 1 New CANON zm8 mov. camera; 1 6&7 trans. radios; 1 used Swiss port. typewriter. Apt. 3 or 6, 723 E. Kings- ley. Call 3-2684 Eves, & wkd. B19 FOR SALE-EVERGREENS by employee of chemistry stores at wholesale to University personnel. Priced at $2.00 to 45.00. Junipers, yews, arborvitae, spreaders, uprights, globes, dwarfs. Call Michael Lee at NO 8-8574. B22 FOR SALE-Evergreens by employee of chemistry stores at wholesale to Uni- versity personnel. Priced at $2.00 to $5.00. Junipers, yews, arborvitae, spreaders, uprights, globes, dwarfs. Call Michael Lee at NO 8-8574. B22 I CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .80 .96 12 SPECIAr TEN-DAY RATE .39 .47 .*54' Figure 5 average words to t fine, Call Classified between 1:00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 24786 even to pass from one section of Berlin to another. "The only way for East Ger- mans to get out is via West Berlin. In East Berlin, they have a lack of everything because so many flee," said Miss Arnolds. The Rus- sians continually replace the ref- ugees with newly imported border residents. Communications Tangled Miss Arnolds pointed out the difficulty of East-West Berlin communications. You cannot tele- phone from one sector to another. To go into another zone, a letter "takes quite as long as an airmail letter from the USA." This is be- cause of the postal inspection. In East Berlin, to make pur- chases at a store, a person must present an I.D. card. "Even if a West Berliner succeeds in buying things in East Berlin, if you hap- pen to run into East Berlin pa- trols they'll ask how you got the money," said Miss Arnolds. She explained that the West Berlin exchange rate is one West German mark to four East Ger- man marks. However, the East German exchange is one for one. In East Berlin, one cannot make purchases without a receipt show- ing that the money was exchanged at the even rate. Newspapers Differ A visitor to East Berlin will' see newspapers carrying com- pletely opposite versions of the same news articles. The radio does the same. The minute the Ameri- can base radio goes off the air, a voice with an American accent be- gins to broadcast Communist prop- aganda, on the same frequency. / i, I___I_________________________ Forsythe Gallery Schedules First Survey of Modern Art d 11 I The first of a s formal discussions art, led by a group authorities, will be the Forsythe Gallery Prof. Charles Saw of the University Mu will represent the m tors' point of view it ation of modern art in an historical art The following we Prof. Marvin Eisen ;eries of in- h ftehstr fatdp MOTOROLA, Blond Console 17" TV. $30. on modern head of the history of art dept., Univ. Ext. 3361 or NO 2-8609, evenings. of local art will speak on the position of mod- B28 presented at e art in thstram of t hi TAPE RECORDER. Knight. Tape, mike,1 on Oct. 6. tory. To illustrate his talk, he headphones and phono cord. $75. NO' will show slides at Tappan Hall. 3-6448. B30- yer, director The viewpoint of the practicing- .seum of Art, artist will be presented on Oct. 20, F'OR SALE F- Automatic washing na- fuseum direc-( chine, Frigidaire, 3 years old. Call by King Calkins, head of the art ( NO 3-6995 after 6 p.m. B24 n a consider- department of Eastern. Michigan and its place University, BARGAIN CORNER collection, Mdr r oi ctModern Art a Topic ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks ek, Oct. in Modern art and its inclusion in 39c: shorts 69C; military supplies. berg, acting private collections will be discuss- SAM'S STORE, 122 E. Washington ed Oct. 27. by Prof. Marvin Fel- Wi helr of the English dept.e r BUSINESS PERSONAL An additional panel of the four __-____________ discussion leaders will be schedul- DISPOSING of part of my large library at private sale. There are books on ed If requested by the group. Ac- every subject among thousands ofI cording to Mrs. Franklin Forsythe, books collected for 65 years. Showings ' director of the gallery, the series at 617 Packard St. from 12 p.m. to 51 is being presented in answer to p.m. everyda except Sunday. Rea- the many requests last year for ; -a s , lectures and panels on contem- BEFORE you buy a class ring, look at let res .andFpelonhconte the official Michigan ring. Burr-Pat- porary art. Fee for the complete terson and Auld Co. 1209 South Uni-_ program is $3.50. versity, NO 8-8887. FF2r LOST AND FOUND LOST: 1 pair of men's black glasses in open ended /tan leather case, frame cracked. Call NO 2-9666. A16 LOST: 30 weeks of dull, unimaginative extra-curricular activity. If found, call NO 2-3241 (Student Publications Bldg.) for further information and reward. Al FOUND: 30 weeks (a full school year) of interesting, newsy reading. This was found on the Diag June 6, 1960, and the owner is wanted desperately. Please call NO 2-3241 for information, and find a year's DAILY subscription as a reward (only $7.00 too). A2 LOST? To find yourself try the Michi- gan Daily. Just find a telephone and dial NO 2-3241. A3 BLACK SWEATER lost at History 50 exam. N.S. Aud. last June. Will person who found it call or return it to lost and found. 2nd floor Ad. Bldg. or Mary, 587 Jordan. A14 FOUND-One man's summer jacket by Michigan Union on Sept. 24. Call West Quad, Paul Rattray-433 Wil- liams, A9 LOST: During Registration week Gold bracelet with "Judy" on it. Return to Ad. Bldg. Lost and Found. Reward. A13 LOST: Girl's Brown suede jacket. On State or Ann Sts. Call NO 5-8507. All LOST: Brown and light gray vertical striped cardigan sweater, in E. Hall last Thursday. Call 1 Hayden, E. Quad. A15 LOST bet. Waterman Gym and Mark- ley, woman's black-framed glasses In red case. Call NO 5-7711, Ext. 3215. A12 LOST: Small billfold between Union and Maynard and Liberty. Return to Ad. Bldg., 2nd floor, lost and found. Reward $20. A10 GIRL'S BROWN SWEATER found at game last Saturday in section 28. Phone NO 2-4576. Ask for Mike. A8 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 X1 ROOM AND BOARD SINGLE ROOM near campus. Einens furnished. Phone Joe-NO 3-6229. E28 TWO GIRLS want roommate to share apt. Call NO 3-9737 for information. E21 ROOME CLOSE TO CAMPUS. $6-7. Linen furn. 1319 Hill St. NO 2-6422. E15 WANTED: girl graduate student to share room in new apartment. Full use kitchen and living room. $37.50 a month. 718 Lawrence. Phone NO 5- 5125 or NO 3-0787. E12 PHOTO SUPPLIES LEICA M3, NIKKOR f2.5 tele., and other like-new equipment. Value $725.00. Best offer over $425. Box 2, Daily. D2 LEICA M3-Telephoto lens and other equip. All as new, $450. Box 2, Daily. D1 BIKES and SCOOTERS, 1959 ITOM motor bike, very good condi- tion ,1800 miles. $145. NO 5-5855. Z4 PERSONAL BIG DADDY is still waiting, but isn't fussy. 3-7305 after 6. F76 AL YOUNG sings--Cafe Promethean this Friday & Saturday. 9-12. F26 DEAR BILL: Please give me your picture for Christmas. Dear Joan: I don't have any pictures. Dear Bill: Get your senior picture taken at the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard. Sign up upstairs. Deadline Tuesday. Dear Joan: Get one of you too, hmm? Take my shirt, my lit. notes and my cuff links ...but get your own YOU TELL HER, MAN. The Court King is your shoe,...professional traction-tread soles, flexible instep, full cushioning. A pro on the tennis court, but just as right with stacks. .', r ~ X GIRL HiAS RIGHTS. Like having a Champion Oxford made just for women. Comes with Ffashionable new taper toe-or round toe, if preferred, Light in weight, cool and colorful. YO Get U.S. KEDS-male or female-at any good shoe or department store. flexible ~ ~ *ot insep fulcsinn . ed pr n the tei coulrt, but std tadrrs rhoihf lcs U ni t ed Stiaties R ubb e r Rlockefeller Center, Flew York 20, N -a York" See the COllectionof 'S I. \N, 'S'.. V.. -- . "Sjo e sKD F75 FRENCH CLASSES by native teacher. Small groups, any age 4-70. Day or evening. Call 8 a.m.-8 p.m. NO 2-954L P72 VISIT Ann Arbor's only espresso coffee house. COMING-the outside, inside, and edae. P55 IF YOU ARE A COED and are asked whether you want a career or mar- riage, the odds are I in 3 you'll want both. P73 COMING Friday. Oct. 7. Carlos Montoya. Tickets now on sale at the Disc Shop. F36 FOR THE FINEST in music and enter- tainment contact the Bud-Mor Agen- cy, featuring the BollWeevils, Johnny Harvard, Dick Tilkin, the Kingsmen, Ray Lewis, Al Young, Al Blaser, Men of Note plus many others. 1103 South University. NO 2-6362. F57 HOW LONG does it take you to read a 100,000-word novel? Three days? A week? A month? If it does, then it will take you just as long to read every word in your daily newspaper. The average newspaper contains about- 80,000 to 10,000 words, exclusive of ads. P74 CLARENCE BYRD TRIO plays jazzA t the Cafe Promethean every Sunday night. P88 AMBASSADOR Civic Ballet Auditions. Wednesday, October 5th, 8:30 P.M. 525 E. Liberty. NO 3-6633. All per- formances at Lydia Mendelssohn. P24 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. 'SI USED CARS '53 BEL AIR CHEVY. Radio, heater, snow tires. Cali NO 5-6436 after 4:30. N30 1957 ISETTA-BMW 300. Call NO 3-2691 (evenings). N28 '55 AUSTIN HEALY. Good cond., no rust. Phone NO 8-8253 between 4-10 P.M. N29 DE SOTO, 1950. Great condition all over. Call John Logan, NO 2-6436. X24 1956 WHITE FORD, customline 2-door, automatic transmission, radio, heater, white walls, excellent condition. NO 3-5355. N23 RENAULT DAUPHINE. Excellent con- dition. Heater & defroster. 13,000 miles. Call NO 3-2633. X21 BLACK '54 OLDS convertible. Rd leather seats, new top. Good rubber. Never wintered in Michigan, so no rust. Phone NO 24466.' N17 1955 FORD, 4 door, automatic transmis- sion, radio, heater, motor excellent condition, new battery. NO 2-4717 aft- er 7 p.m. N18 1955 PLYMOUTH 2 door with overdrive. $350 or best offer. NO 2-3426., N 1940 PLYMOUTH. Business coupe. Ex- ceptional. HA 6-183 after 3 P.M. N16 RENAULT DAUPHINE, '60, under 7000 miles, automatic clutch, radio, white, $1570. DUnkirk 3-7550. Melvindale. Call 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. N1 END PARKING, transportation woes! Buy my 1957 Allstate (Vespa) Cruis- aire scooter. Thrifty. Excellent cond. Extras. $200. NO 5-6557. N4 HELP WANTED SECRETARIAL help wanted. Qualified secretary needed in modern, new, well equipped office. Call NO 5-6103 or NO 2-2761. HIS GIRL WANTED for cooking and light hosue cleaning during evening meal hours. Call after 6 for appointment, NO 8-9061. H17 SALES women and men: Part-time-- your own hours. Good pay. Call NO 2- 4924 after 7 p.m., Thursday, Friday, Saturday. His COLLEGE STUDENTS: If you can work from 5-9:30 each evening, Monday through Friday, you can earn $85 a week if this will not interfere with your college program. This is a na- tional concern and the college plan is a proven program. Must be neat WANTED TO BUY WANTED: 3 season tickets to the Extra Concert Series. NO 5-7539. K2 BUSINESS SERVICES ON THIS auspicious occasion, we'd like to devote our remaining space to M.S.U. A moment of meditation and sympathy for the cow-college. "Lum- bard's," 1225 S. Univ. J31 SELF-SERVICE Westinghouse Laundro- mat. 24 washers, 8 dryers. Always open. 229 Depot St., Ann Arbor. State St. north to Depot St., turn left 1' blocks, J29 SEWING & IRONING done in my home. NO 3-0668. J22 APPLES, EGGS, pop bottles-anything you need for the game is at Ralph's Market, 709 Packard. NO 5-7131. J32 REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop. 224 Nickels Arcade. NO 2-4647. J10 GRINNELL'S 81st Anniversary Specials Brand new Grinnell "Holly" Piano only $496 Make Grinnell's your _piano j headquarters Uprights from $69 JI ALTERATIONS and sewing. Mrs. Sny- der, NO 2-7968. J26 TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED out State to 1a past expressway, daily at noon.. sonable fee. N 03-1511, Ex. 3344. mile Rea- G2 Tareyton has the taste- HERE'S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT: 1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL ... ALTERATIONS CUSTOM DRESSMAKING: Alterations.