THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY Board Views Moch Report (Continued from Page 1) would then have become too Iteavy.. There was extensive discussion on the report's next point, asking a "'pay-as-you-eat" system. %k 'Meal Ticket Moch said that residents could pay once a week for only the meals they had eaten. If they refused or neglected to hand in their meal icket as proof of the number of meals partaken, they would be charged for every meal as a pre- caution against cheating. Board members, however, ques- ioned the cost feasibility of such i scheme. Schaadt argued that in >rder for the business office to scan 7,000 meal tickets a week, additional clerical help and many nore work-hours would be re- yuirecd. The discussidn then moved to onsider quality of the food itself. :n his report, Moch called it "the stigma of residence halls." He eent on to criticize the food as nstitutional, and that many of ;he dishes on the menu are "just >lain disliked" by the men. 18-Page Report Schaadt countered this argu- nent with an 18-page report out- ining the business office's policies ;owards menu planning and giving a sample menu for a one-month period. He said that many students ask vhy tbe "so - called unpopular fishes are served," and then at he same time ask for more of a rariety in the food. "Obviously you :an't have both." Substantial progress has been nade over the past few years in ood -service, Schaadt said. "I've lad no real complaints this year." He remarked that meals cost he resident a total of $2.15 a day, r 23 per cent of his room and. >oard cost. Not Disclosed When Moch asked the reason why salaries of residence halls iflicials and raw food costs would ot be disclosed, Vice-President or Student Affairs James A Lewis eplied that it was Regental policy Iot to reveal such figures. The final point for board dis- ussion centered on "pink slips." 4och, while acknowledging that hese reports were the major neans of discouraging incompati- le and undesirable residents from eturning to the halls, neverthe- ess saw a need for the comments o be open to the resident. Hale then said that "condition- lly approved" and "disapproved" valuations were required to be hown to the resident. He prom- sed that the administration would ext year make, sure residents would be acquainted with the type f questions on th& report. Landes Says Cao Supplies hay Run Out The United States may run out f useable coal before it runs out f oil, Prof. Kenneth K. Landes f the geology department said ecently. Coal reserves reduce in time be- ause of production, while new dis- overies of oil are constantly being made, Landes noted at the Michi- an Academy of Science, Arts and ,etters meeting. He explained that published igures for coal reserves have been reatly overestimated while those r oilthave been greatly under- Atimated. The coal industry is actively eeking federal legislation for con- ols on fuels based on end use. It is their thesis that the United tates is using up its hydrocarbon ssets at a much faster rate than s coal assets and therefore the se of burning oils should be re- ,ricted in favor of the allegedly ore abundant coal," he asserted. Prof. Landes said that analysis f the reserve statistics does not lpport this contention, since each ear the petroleum industry dis- overs more in new reserves. c" va :::". :. !: :4:"}:. ........... dfid FJ ... :: ::: 'V . i . y . M1M1, .... , v:"". "r. ". ". v. 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J .A ..r J.. ,.1..; ... 1, , .A. . .h... .xrr..A,,,. . 1 JFru rrrr,.h.. r...,.:..A.,., h,,.,{.:1,., 5...1.J«.,x,....,. ...... .h.. .:.. r.. x..xY: r:: r. ................... ................ ........ ... .......... ;.rr. .} .,.A..h.T.?,.,. rrrrr..r}n..¢ , ,..........h.,.....ana...,...1 h.....1 J.h. a'vr.A...A.",r.. ;.."rsw:},.....m....h ..................:v:r."r:.";:.v:r:":.":.":.":.":r.a":r::.::dvvvrr:,vw.","."}.v:::.v: }:::,,. ..... :,"..:.".:.v}}:M1.a::: 3 r ......................................................... ........... (Continued from Page 4) Meeting on the teacher's certificate in English will be held next Wed., March 28, at 4 p.m. in 2402 Mason Hall. Freshmen and sophomores interested in teaching English in the junior and senior high school are urged to attend. Hopwood Awards: Students planning, to enter the Hopwood Contest are re- minded that transcripts of first se- mested 'records are due in the Hop- wood Room by April 1. The Bain-Swiggett Poetry Prize: Man- uscripts to be considered for this prize must be in the Hopwood Room, 1006 Angell Hall by 5 p.m. Mon., April 2. 40% Student Discounts available for new U-M Professional Theatre Pro- gram memberships: The APA Resident Theatre Company will perform eight plays during 1962-63 at Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre and Trueblood Aud. Students who are APA Season Members will also receive 40% discounts for the "Great Star Series," which begins this Thurs., March 29 at 8:30 p.m., at Hill Aud. when Dame Judith Anderson, the celebrated tragedienne, will appear with a Broadway cast in "Medea '62." Stu- dents who are not season members receive 20% discount for individual per- formances. For further information, call ext. 3518, or come to the Professional Theatre'Program Office at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Monday-Friday, 1:00-5:00 p.m. Hill Aud. box office is open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily.. Foreign Visitors Following is the foreign visitor who will be on the campus this week on the dates indicated. Program arrangements are being made ORGANIZATION NOTICES Chess Club, Meeting, Mar. 28, 7:30 p.m.,' Union, Rm. 3K. Free lessons. Everyone welcome. * * * Congr. Disc. E & R Stud. Guild, Cost Luncheon Discussion. Dr. Herman Jac- o15s, "A Jewish View of Man," Mar.. 27, Noon, 802 Monroe. * ss* German Club, Coffee Hour, Mar. 28, 4072 FB (lounge opposite elevator). Ger- man conversation, music, singing . "Herzlich willkommen!" * * * Newman Club, Mariage Series: "Mixed Marriages"-Rev. J. F. Bradley, Mar. 30, 8 p.m., 331 Thompson. * * * Rifle Club, Meeting, Mar. 28, 7:30 p.m., ROTC Range. * * s Ulir Ski Club, Election Meeting, Mar. 28, 7:30 p.m., Union. * * * U. of M. Folk Dancers, Meeting, In- struction, Dancing, Mar. 27, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. * * * Young Americans for Freedom, Or- ganizational Meeting-members please attend to help determine programs, projects and committee chairmanships, Mar. 27, 7:30 p.m., Union, Rm. 3M. by the International Center: Mrs. Clif-1 ford R. Miller. Jorge R. Lewis, Teacher of Phonetics, Phonemics and Languages, Institute Superior del Profesorado, Buenos Aires, Argentina, March 27-April 1, Agenda Student Government Council March 28, 1962, 7:15 p.m., Council Room Constituents' Time 9:00 Minutes of previous meeting, Officer Reports: President, Letters, Report; Executive Vice-President, Re- port; Administrative Vice-President, Re- port; Treasurer, Report. Special Business: Election of New Of- ficers. Standing Committees. Ad Hoc Committees and Related Boards: Report on Study of the Hare System. Old Business: NBA Standing Com- mittee. New Business. Constituents and Members Time. Announcements. Adjournment. Special Business-9:30 p.m.: Meeting with Faculty Committee on Student Relations. Summary of Action Taken by Student Government Council at its Meeting of March 23, 1962 Postponed: Approval of minutes of previous meeting. Adopted: That the agenda be amend- ed to postpone all old business until the next regular meeting. Adopted: That Student Government Council seat the following persons as elected members of the Council for one-year terms: Kenneth Miller, Rich- ard G'sell, Katherine Ford, Howard Abrams, Fred Battle. That Student Gov- ernment Council adopt the report of the Credentials and Rules Committee. Events Tuesday Graph Theory Seminar: Dr. Philip Benkard will report on Tutte's paper, "An Algorithm for Determining Wheth- ed a Given Binary Matroid is Graphic." Tues., March 27, at 3 p.m. in 2450 Mason Hall. Lecture: March 27, 4:10 p.m., Aud. C. Speaker: Prof. Valentin Kiparsky, Free University of Berlin, on "Troubles in Soviet Linguistics." The public is in- vited. Mathematics Colloquium: Prof. N. G. DeBruijn, University of Amsterdam, and Queen's University, will speak on "Gen- eralization of Polya's Fundamental Theorem in Enumerative Combinator- ial Analysis" on Tues., March 27, at 4 p.m. in 3209 Angell Hall. Refreshments in 3212 Angell Hall at 3:30 p.m. Events Wednesday Degree Recital: Eugene Gonzalez, clarinetist, will present a recital on Wed., March 28, 8:30 p.m., Lane Hall Aud., in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree Master of Music. Pa'tricia Parker, pianist, will ac- company him. Assisting will be Carolyn Lentz, violist. Compositions to be per- formed are by Manevich, Reger, and Schumann. Open to the public. Linguistics Meeting: Prof. Ernst Pul- gram lecturing on "Dialanguage and Protolanguage," Wed., March 28, 8:00 p.m., at the Rackham Amphitheatre.. Illustrated Public Lecture: "From Sense to Symbol" by Prof. Joshua C. Taylor, University of Chicago; Wed., March 28, at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. B, An- gell Hall. Anatomy Seminar: Wed., March 28, 4 p.m., 2501 East Medical Bldg. Dr. Ray- mond Henry,. Instructor, Department of Physiology, Wayne State Medical School, will speak on "Methods in Ex- perimental Thrombosis." Sociology Colloquium: "Franco-Amer- ican Differences in Political Behavior" will be discussed by Dr. Phillip Con- verse,. Asst. Prof. of Sociology, and Study Director, Survey Research Center, on Wed., March 28 at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. A. Botanical Seminar: Willard W. Payne, Department of Botany, will speak on "Aspects of Ragweed Evolution" on Wed., March 28 at 4:15 p.m. in 1139 Natural Science. Tea will be served at 4 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Conan Jen- nings Castle, Music: thesis: "The Grand Motest of Andre Campra." Wed., March 28, 107 Maynard St., School of Music, at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, L. E. Cuyler. Placement ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- VIEWS-Seniors & grad students please sign interview schedule at 128-H West Engrg.: MARCH 28- Armour Res. Foundation of Ill,, Insti- tute of Tech., Chicago, Iii.-BS, MS, PhD: ChE, EE, EM, Met. MS-PhD: Nu- clear. Feb. & June grads. R. & D. Badger Mfg. Co, Engrg.-Construction Div., Cambridge, Mass.-BS-MS: ChE, CE & ME. MS: Construction. Design & Construction. (a.m.)- Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway Co., Jolit, Gary & Chicago-BS-MS: IE, ME. BS: CE. MS: Ind. Admin. June & Aug. grads. Des., Prod. Ford Motor Co., Glass Res. Labs, Lin- coln Park, Mich.-MS, Prof. & PhD: ChE. Prof.: Applied Mech. All Degrees: EM. BS: Engrg. Physics. BS, MS, PhD: ME. MS-PhD: Inorganic Chem., Phys. Chem. All Degrees: Physics. PhD: Math. June & Aug. grads. Both Men & Wom- en. R. & D. New York Central Systems, Entire N.Y. Central Sys.-BS: CE, EE, IE, ME. Des., Formal Mgmt. Trng. Philco Corp., Phila., Pa. & its sub- urbs-Al Degrees: EE, ME. BS: Engrg. Math. June & Aug. grads, Both Men & Women. Des., R. & D. Atomic & Nuclear Div., Pittsburgh, Pa. area-MS-PhD: ME & Nuclear. June & Aug. grads. Both Men & Women. Des., R. & D. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu- Subscribe to The Michigan Daily dents, please call General Div., Bureau of Appointments for interview appoint- ments with the following: WED., MARCH 28- Burroughs Corp., Detroit, Mich.-Men; degree Liberal Arts, Bus. Ad., or Math for Salaried Sales & Sales Promotion of new product. Some openings in Elec. Computing. Location: Anywhere in U.S. R. H. Macy, Inc., New York-LaSalle's, Toledo, 0. Men & Women; degree Lib- eral Arts or Bus. Ad. for Jr. Exec. Trng. Squad. Prog. primarily toward trng. careers in Merchandise Div. LaSalle's is a div. of R. H. Macy & Co. Agency for International Develop- ment, Washington, D.C.-Men & Wom- en; MA in Econ or in International Relations with good grounding in Econ. for 6 mo. trng. prog. in Wash. If have already taken & passed F.S.E.E., may be considered for summer employment, MARCH 28 & 29- Women's Army Corps, U.S. Army - Women for exec. positions as commis- sioned officers. Will also explain sum- mer "Cadet" prog. which is offered with pay but without obligation. Interview- ing in Army ROTC bid. No appointment needed. THURS., MARCH 29-- Singer Mfg. Co., N.Y., N.Y.-Men; de- gree any field for Management Trng. on one of $everal co. div. including Sales, Mfg., Finance & Controller's Of- fice. Agency for International Develop- ment,kWash., D.C.-(See Wed.). Bank of America, San Francisco, Calif. (p.m. only)-Men; degree Liberal Arts or Bus. Ad. for one of the following Mgmt. Trng. Programs: 1) General Banking Trng. Frog. 2) Trust Trng. Prog. 3) International Trng. Prog. S. S. Kresge Co., Det., Mich.-Loca- tion: Mich., Ind., & Ohio (igly.)-Men; degree Liberal Arts or Bus. Ad. for Mgmt. Trng. Prog. in Retailing. Will consider those with other majors. FRI., MARCH 30- Bank of America-(See Thurs.). Baxter Laboratories, Inc., Morton Grove, II1.-Men; degree any field of Liberal- Arts or Bus. Ad. for Mgmt. Trng. Prog. in many fields. SUMMER PLACEMENT: 212 SAB- Camp Indianola-Wis. Boys' Camp. L. Woldenberg will interview men for counseling positions from 1:30 to 5:00 p.m. on Tues., March 27 (today). Camp Nahelu-A Mich. Coed Camp. Stan Michaels, president of the Ameri- can Camping Assoc., will interview men & women counselors for all positions in camping. Wed., March 28, 1:30 to 5 p.m. The Detroit Edison Co.-Mr. Gold will interview bet. 9:00 a.m. & noon on Thurs., March 29. Juniors in Liberal Arts interested in mgmt. may apply. Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Vil- lage, Dearborn, Mich.-Summer posi- tions for Men & Women in Food Serv- ice Dept. Interview period is April 18- 25 bet. 1:30 p.m. & 4:30 p.m. Summer job opportunities continual- ly arrive at the Summer Placement Service. Keep coming in and looking over the new jobs and the old. Resorts and camps are still looking for good people. SAVE! 60% on your dryeleaning bills FRAN KS KLEEN KING 1226 PACKARD SAFE - ODORLESS - WRI NKLE-FREE Any combination of clothing (any colors) up to 10 lbs. for $2.00 20-MINUTE CYCLE Attendant On Duty At All Times Packard Laundry -- Packard Drugs Adjoining Kennedy sums up his first year in office "I don't think most Americans real- ize, " says JFK, "the way the situ- ation has changed."In this week's Post, inan authoritative article based on talks with the President and his ch ief advisers, StewartAlsop tells how Kennedy has revamped U.S. strategy. What was behind his struggle with the Pentagon. And how the new plans are working out. The Saturday Evening MARcH 31 ISSUE/NOW "',) .' TON SALE r* * Delicious Hamburgers.. .15c Hot Tasty French Fries...10c Triple Thick Shakes... 20c 2000 W.Stadium Blvd. APPLICATIONS FOR THE CONFERENCE ON ITHE UNIVERSITY; ARE NOW BEING ACCEPTED FROM ALL STUDENTS, " 13 STUDENT DELEGATES-AT-LARGE will be chosen for the Conference, to be held May 18-19 in the Union n " PICK UP APPLICATION FORMS and information on the Conference from SGC Secretary, SAB. Sign up for an in- terview DEADLINE: FRIDAY SPEC IAL ALL CAPITAL ALL ANGEL HI-F reg. 3.98 Now 2.65 'A 4OF reg. 4.98, Now 3.29 COMPLETE . CATALOG reg. 5.98 Now 3.99 Limited time only THiE ALBUMS, S1 NOT NEWCOMERS! THE ARTISTS COLE-SHEARING I This first-time teaming of two trenendous talents finds both artists at the top of their form-each ;:..stimulating the other to new heights on "September Song..I Got It Bad...Let There Be Love" and nine n others. .z::.:.<" kLr:IUII: 0. The Man has his tender moments-and this time he's back with his great ballad style treating you to twelve great standards like "But Beautiful,...Darn That Dream...It Might As Well Be Spring... Moonlight Becomes You.,,.and Easy To Love." PIAFI France's newest and finest "chansons" as selected and sung by the mistress of Gaul's laughter, tears, devotion and despair. This twelve-fold treat includes her hit interpretation of America's prize-winning "Exodu~s." , { ~STARR!N: Kay caresses the blues backed by the subdued swing- ing of six renowned jazzmen including the soulful Ben Webster. "It Had To Be You ..More Than You Know... P.S. I Love You... and Nevertheless" top these twelve. .::. SINATRA! The Master turns his talents to twelve of the finest sentimental standards in his songbook, including "Ill Be Seeing You ... As Time Goes By...Septem- ber Song...When The World Was Young...I'll Remember April"...and seven others. LEE!1 Peggy belts the blues with big-band backing-in a coast-to-coast tour of swinging cities accompanied by conductor Quincy Jones. Hear "Kansas City. I Lost My Sugar in Salt Lake City... Basin Street {: Blues" plus nine. ; f rDirrorm IMER JOBS How to get yours! mpus Integration . . iliitary Deferments . . irnett . . Ribicoff -ubeck . . . Saroyan. ws .. Books.. Records .. reers ... Fashions ...and P SS AM PU S LU ST RAT ED ._ _ . . E... l *- . . s I~ .~ TT~ Unl m -mE -