THE MICUII Tiew U.S., Latin American Relations Nohl Sets Committees To Evaluate OSA Report i , I I I 11 11 pi By RONALD WILTON There are many impediments to good relations between the United States and Latin America. This conclusion was reached by Prof. Paul Ilie, of the Spanish department and Stephan Nube, '63E, a Venezuelan student at a seminar conducted in Spanish by the Association for Commitment to World Responsibility Tuesday night. Leading off the discussion Prof. Ilie said that South American countries were sensitive with re- gards to aid from, the Unite.i States. "This aid can take two forms. First there is investment of private capital. This gives investors work- ing through the United States government influence in Latin America," he explained. The second type is. loans. "The giving of these is determined by world politics. If loans are neces- sary they must 'come either from the United States or the Soviet Union." Noting that the responsibility for progress does not lie with the lender of the money but with the individual nation he pointed - -map% see: I Q-AssembIy Show prdaenh DUKE ELLINGTON AND H IS NEW WORLD FAMOUS ORCHESTRA at: HILL AUDITORIUM on: Saturday, MARCH 3, 1962± out that in Latin America con- servatives are elected on the basis of reforms which they do not deliver. Communist Opposition "The Communists are the only opposition to the established gov- ernments which causes concern in the United States." Nube explained that one must; understand Latin America through, its history. There are remem- brances of past interventions by the United States, Santo Domingo, Nicaragua, Panama and Mexico. "When Franklin Roosevelt was president there was a honeymoon between Latin America and the United States. When John F. Dul- les became Secretary of State there was a return to the policies of Theodore Roosevelt but they were more sophisticated." He characterized the interven- tion in Cuba and the Alliance for Progress as means to hold back the enemies of the United States rather than of help. Great Misery "But times are, different now; the misery of Latin America is too great. To change all this there is a real need for sincerity which is lacking. There will be a need for help and for expropriation of certain enterprises if there is to be real progress."1 He said that Latin America is ruled by the church, the army and an economic elite. "I don't see any peaceful way out because these elements refuse every re- form. Either they will have to accept peaceful reform or they will have to contend with a revo- lution. "A half million people in Cara- cas live in pitiful slums made out of cardboard. They cannot wait 20 years-they want a solution or a' beginning now." Student Government Council President Richard Nohl, '62BAd,a yesterday appointed four special committees to study the Office of Student Affairs Study Committee Report. Following directions of a Coun- cil motion passed Wednesday1 night, Nohl named at least one' of SGC's representatives to the GSA study group on each com- mittee. The committees, which will re- port their recommendations back to Council at a special meeting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, are: Philosophy: SGC Administra- tive Vice-President Robert Ross, '63, chairman; Thomas Brown, '63; Michigan Union President Paul C. Carder, '62; Brian Glick, '62; Per Hanson, '62, and Daily Editor John Roberts, '62. Structure: Sharon Jeffrey, '63, chairman; Carder; Michigan League President Beatrice Nem- laha, '62, and SGC Treasurer Steven Stockmeyer, '63. Housing: Thomas Moch, '62E, chairman; Inter - Quadrangle Council President Richard Geary, '63; Miss 'Nemlaha; Interfraternity Council President Robert Peter- Bretton To Lead, Forum on Africa Prof. Henry L. Bretton of the political science department will lead a forum on "The Shaping of Modern Africa" at 7:30 tonight in the Memorial Lounge, 502 E. Huron Street. This is the first in a series of Friday night forums considering problems in various areas of the world. sen, '62; and Assembly Association President Sally Jo Sawyer. Rule Making and Rule Enforce- ment: SGC Executive Vice-Presi- dent John Martin, '62, Chairman; Glick; Richard G'sell, '63E; Miss4 Sawyer and Panhellenic Associa- tion President Susan Stillerman, '62A&D. Miss Sawyer, Miss Nemlaha, Carder and Glick served on the OSA study committee. New 'Ensian To Feature Campus Sites This year'sMichiganensian will feature five three-color drawings of familiar campus sites by Alexis Lahti, '63A&D. The drawings of Angell Hall, Hill . Auditorium, the Michigan Union, the Michigan Stadium, and the "Hill" will be used as two- page spreads to separate the five sections of the 'Ensian. They will be printed in orange, blue, ocher and black and white. The drawings will be printed by flat process color offset litho- graphy. Four different drawings,' one for each color and one for black and white, must be made before the pictures can be litho- graphed. This year, for the first time, the 'Ensian will be printed entirely by offset. Business manager Paul Krynicki, '62, explained that the reduced cost of this method is one reason for the introduction of ex- tensive color spreads. FOR RENT FOR MEN: Near campus, two singles, one double, two baths, refrigerator, breakfast privilege. $10/week. NO 2- 5152. C18 GRADUATE STUDENT-Large, pleas- ant room-521 Walnut. C29 SINGLE, furnished room-to rent-436 Thompson. C19 LARGE five room furnished apartment. Across from Engineering Arch. $40/ month. 11101 S.U. NO 5-6012. C13 S. STATE ST.-Five rooms and bath, Open occupancy. First floor. Heat, water, and some furniture included. $100. HA 6-3441. 016 WILL SHARE APARTMENT. Why live in a room when you can share one half of a huge apartment? Cheap! Convenient! Call NO 5-8958. 014 ROOM FOR RENT with kitchen priv- ileges. Close to campus. 11101 South University. Call NO 5-6012. C15 ON CAMPUS. Nicely furnished apart- ment for two. $90/mo. 1330 Wilmnot, Apt. 4. Call 665-5941 after 5 p.m. C17 CAMPUS - HOSPITALS Large, two bedroom apartment, nicely furnished, located near in- tersection of Washtenaw and For- est Avenues. Ideal for three or four. Immediate occupancy. Call for appointment to see: NO 2-7787_ days and NO 3-2763 evenings. Campus Management C10 FOR RENT: Basement Studio at 815 Packard. NO 2-8361. C11 ROOMMATE WANTED-large campus apartment. NO 5-6083. C8 FURNISHED two bedroom apartment for sub-let, March 15-August 15. Lease could be extended. Excellent campus location. Paved parking. Well furn- isned. Call 663-6956. 09 WANTED: Girl to share "large, attrac- tive, campus apartment" with two. others. Reasonable rent. NO 5-0447. C40 ON CAMPUS nice clean 3-room furn- ished apartment: $125 per month in- cludes utilities. Immed. occupancy. Call NO 2-1897 after 3.1 C39 LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .70 .85 1 .0 Figure 5 average words Call Classified between 1 :00 and to a line 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Phone NO 2-47 86 SPECIAL SIX-DAY RATE .58 .8 'I All Seats Reserved TICKETS 1.25 1.75 2.25 Regulr Sales Now going on at Hill Auditorium Box Office PERSONAL She's legal no win the Empire State For her P-Bell Party She'll have to wait S'he's a Markley gal but to be more precise Happy coming of age to Miss 3217 twice. F5 DALE: How are your corrupted friends lately? Those 7:30 a.m. phone calls haven't materialized. ra F7 A.D. and M.H.-We were there yester- day-where were YOU? J.D. and A.G. F8 MOLLY & MIKE NEED YOU1 !! Rare, amazing Twist routine now available to the public. Be first on your block! No boxtopsl No slo- gans! Just money! -=Available: T~s, weddings, divorces, Bar 'Mitz- vahs, riots, lynchings & all gay oc- casions. Phone S.Q. Exts. 548 or 549. If busy, Shout! Our windows will be open! IF9 SL.-They walk around the campus at one-hundred per, they move too fast to think. Pseudo drongs of university order. Explain why some coeds are twinks. F6 TO THE MAD MOONERS: It is quite evident that your "visible assets" are in tune with lunar cycles only & not with tact or with invitations! the "Untouchables" Flo ENSIAN HOUSE ,REPRESENTATIVES: Turn in money and receipts in Fishbowl Monday and Tuesday F3 Roses are red Violets are grey The finest of girls Petition for WAA. F4 CURIOUS about the Phi Ups? You can get the real scoop about them Satur- day night at the gala Phi Up Open- Open. P26 - IMNS- HLSL FRIENDLY SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS CAR SERVICE, ACCESSOR C-TED STAN DARD SERVICE Stop in NOW for broke work engine tune-up battery and tire check- "You expect more from Standard & you get it." SOUTH UNIVERSITY & FORES'I NO 8-9168 BARGAIN CORNER ATTENTION ROTC OFFICERS' SHOES Army-Navy Oxfords - $7.95 Socks 39c Shorts 69c Military Supplies SAM'S STORE '122 E. WASHINGTON «r1 F RIDAY FO0RUMS, Begin March 2nd. A series of forums will begin Friday night considering questions of central concern in different areas of the world. The first of three will be on Africa. -This week's topic will be: i RA "THESHAPNC F MOERN- AFICA S ABO' TAGE WAS MY BUSINESS His alias: "Dr. Moriarty." His job: dreaming up fiendish plots for U.S. spies. After 20 years of silence, Stanley Lovell reveals the true story of his adventures in the O.S.S. In this week's Post, he tells about the "nedy Lamarr"-a de- vice that panicked a roomful of generals. About a devilish weapon for wrecking Nazi supply trains. And about a "mistake" that might have blown up the White House. The Saturday Evening MARCH 31962 ISSUENOWON SALE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued fromPage 4) Carondeiet Foundry Co., St. Louis, Mo., -1) Sales position which is industrial selling & will call for considerable travel. Prefer grad in mechanical, metal- lurgical, industrial or chemical engrg. 2) Sales Trainee Position-will be train- lng for industrial selling. Above quali- fications. Ford Motor Co., Glass Research Lab. -Positions for both Junior & Senior Research Scientists & Engnrs. Research topics are: Applied Mech. or Applied SIN9 MARCH 9th L Subjects included will be, European Penetration of Africa through Trade, exploration, colonization-The Colonial. Map of Africa - Patterns of Britain, France, Belgium, Portugal. . The leader of the forum will be Dr. H. L. Bretton, Assoc. Prof. of Poly. Sci. Sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center these forums are open to all., PLACE: MEMORIAL LOUNGE, 502 E. Huron Street; TIME: 7:30 P.M. ,U I Math., Mech Engrg., Chem. Engrg., Op- tics, Physics, Chemistry, & Ceramics. Navy Dept, Washington, D.C.-Civil- ian Job Opportunities throughout the U.S. & Overseas. Many & various open- ings including: Engnrs., Physicists, Po- sition Classifier, Math. Stat., Occupa- tional Analysts, Chemists, Clerk-Steno., etc. " Applied Technology, Inc., Palo Alto, Calif.-Candidate to head East Coast sales operation, withEheadquarters in Washington, D.C. BSEE or Physics de- gree is minimum. Age 28-38. Design or system exper. in commun. radar, or navigation equipment. Exper. in ECM would be ideal. Sales exper. in elec- tronic capital equipment field. Consid- erable travel on East Coast will be re- quired. B. F. Goodrich Co., Akron, O. - 1) Field Engnr.-Flat Belts. Engrg. De- gree in Mining. Must have exper, in mining work, preferably coal fields. 2) Materials Engnr. Degree in Chem. Engrg. pr Chemistry. 1-3 yrs. exper. in factory operation and/or laboratory control work. Please call General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for further information. ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please sign interview schedule at 128-H West Engineering. MARCH 5- ACF Industries, Inc., Albuquerque, N.M.-BS-MS: EM. BS: ChE, EM, EE, ME & Met. June grads. Des., R. & D. American Oil Co., Manuf. Dept., Whit- ing, Ind.--All Degrees: ChE. BS-MS: CE & ME. June & Aug. grads. Des., Con- stru., Maintenance, Tech. Service & Process Engrg. MARCH 5-6-- California State Personnel Board, Sac- ramento, Los Angeles & San Francisco (Continued on Page 8) WE HAVE available for the Easter holi- days-and our annual college invasion of Fort Lauderdale-a hotel room with private entrance and bath. Two double beds - will, accommodate 4. $2.50 perbperson per night. 1 minute from the ocean-1 block of U.S. No. 1. Get your reservations in early. Mr. and Mrs. Win. J. Sweet, 3000 NE 21st Terrace, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. C34 LOT PARKING available. Call NO 2.- 1443. 031 USED CARS MGTD 1953 Silver convertible w/blue top and interior, porthole windows, imnaculate"condition, garage main- tained, one of a kind, sports car, designed and renovated. Owner sell- ing, $2000-firm price. WO 1-7100. N9 59 MORRIS Minor Conv. Best offer over $400. HU 3-5386 after 6 P.M. N8 '49 CHEVROLET, 2-door, good condi- tion. $100. Call 669-8612 after 7:00 evenings. N7 FOR SALE: Alfa Romeo Guilletta coupe. 1959. Excellent, condition, recent over- haul, new battery and generator. Maintained for personal use - never raced. Forced to sell at sacrifice. Reason-unexpected long leave from area. $1875 or nearest offer. Call NO 3-0857. N5 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Lecture notes in Michigan The- atre Saturday night. Call Cindy, NO 3-1561, Ext. 702-Reward. A4 WANTED TO RENT WANTED: A room to stage a party for 60 people on Sat., March 31. Call NO 3-7541, ext. 327. L2 FOR SALE, THE NEW YORK TIMES delivered daily. Student Newspaper Agency, PO Box 241, Ann Arbor, Michigan. M10 DIAMONDS-Charles Reaver Co. is of- fering for sale estate and imported diamonds. For appointment call NO 2-5685 after 6 P.M. M2 DIAMONDS -WHOLESALE., The Largest and Finest Diamonds, at the Best Prices, in area.. Robert Haack Diamond Importers First National Bldg., Suite 504 8y appointment only, NO 3-0653 Diamond mines: British Guiana, Brazil, and Venezuela F31. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED: Air Force recruiting posters for decoration of barren dormitory room. If you can help, please call "Macbeth" or Marcy at NO 3-1561, ext. 134. M2 134l1IVE 5 JCKYI .CJ LANGUAGE TUTORING-French, man, Spanish, Italian, Latin, 0r by young woman with Ph.D. wi years college experience. Campus cation. Call NO 5-7847. GUITAR INSTRUCTION Beginner and advanced. Indivi ual and smail workshop grou: Classical, folk, popular. Call 6942. X HI-FL, PHONO TV, and radio re Clip thi ad for free pickup and livery. Campus Radio and TV, 32, Hoover. NO 5-6644. A-I New and Used Instrumenti BANJOS. GUITARS AND BONGC Rental Purchase Plan PAWL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-18 FOUR NEW 754x14 Tires $69.95. 6= ,Batteries $11.95 & exchange. 12. Batteries - $16.95 & exchange. Gripsafe Atlas Tires. at HICKEY'S 30th N. Main Phone NO 8.' X BEFORE you buy a class ring, lao the official Michigan ring. Burr- terson and Auld Co. 1209 South versity, NO 8-8887. COME IN AND BROWSE AT TH- TREASU RE MART ollcibacce ccovie t LUCKYSTRIK L UCKY STR/KE presents: 'Ut .V 4 aFF!Is "COEDS" 529 Detroit St.' NO 2- m CORRECTION!, PETITON 6 POSITIONS ----------------------------------------- 4 Undergraduate Positions, 2 Graduate Positions I Featuring student ufrnishings all kinds, appliances, typewrite televisions, bicycles, etc. Op Monday & Friday evenings 'til PAID ADVERTISEMENT Mrs. E. Strachai Housemother, Escorts Tour Mrs. E. Strachan, housemo on this campus announces she escort a group of girls from University of Michigan on a week tour to Hawaii this sumi All University co-eds are,cordi invited to join her. The group will join with girls from other campuses ac the U.S. on the well-known H ard Tour, the original Study- program to the Pacific. Girls h a choice between campus dormi residence at the University of waii apartment living at Wai Beach. The price of $569 inch travel by ship from California Honolulu, a full program of sa events including introduction p ties fashion shows, dinner-dar and cultural events, as well boating and beach sports eveni Waikiki Beach. Optional visit the romantic outside islands also available and tour mem can top their summer off witl stop-over at the Seattle Wo Fair on the way home. In addition, students may ei at the University of Hawaii sum session, earning up to six unit credit, either undergraduate graduate. The University, w offers a wide range of course particularly noted for such unu courses as the "Dances of Haw Foods of the Pacific, Costume Asia, Zen Buddhism, Japan Dance and Its Music, or Conve tional Cantonese! 3 Positions 1 Position COEDS AND SUPERCOEDS. Coeds accept a Friday-night date on Friday after- noon. Supercoeds have to keep date books. Coeds wear black and gray. Super- coeds wear green and red and yellow. Coeds talk about "The College." Supercoeds discuss the world. Coeds smoke dainty, tasteless cigarettes that Offices of President, Vice-President, Secretary, and Treasurer for: Business Administration Literature, Science, and Arts i I