TUE MICHIGAN DAILY ..........:..., ... .. .. :. r . r. %vrr vrr :: : ., am ,..::::::: r . r: ..v ..:::.::w; ". : "r ."r ... .. .. .. .. S{: r:"'^:r "'4:4:4::::"?::": Ir, :Y r4"" " .:... ...' r. rr. v. . n::.J..;::. .e::. .: .......::. .::...... ...: v.:a:av.'o.'rJr.....arr......:::::::.... ::,;i.rd:::::'.... sx. r.'"J. :::::.:..:... ::;.... :, a... ..::-. ......: . ....::: .... .' ............ {S:r. ? r ... ... ", " }r" ' "" +" { ....",.. ...r. "?cr:>4;.:4:L": i: :N:rr.".Al@=. iti .: ::?o iJ.ss}r,..r.< DAILY BULLETIN . . . . ...r"r:v::";: .""" .v:....f r:: ...rrrca..s+:^x.:-.~:.^r :,: r. v vr .".MM"" ""::i.:i" : .' }}.I ,! .{. . r, f:{V "?. .f.. . . .r. ..::.. . . .r., ..r : " r r ":""::f :" yY:"": r"M;.j. (Continued from Page 4) For further information, please call General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext, .3544. EDUCATION DIVISION: Beginnin~g Mon., April 23, thefolw ing schools will be at the Bureau to in- terview candidates for the 1962-1963 school year. MON., APRIL 23- Albion, Mich. (Starr Commonwealth) -Late Elem./Asst. in Admin., 6th grade (Prefer woman), Dir. of Athletics/Coa. Basketball & Track, PE/Math/Coa. Basketball, PE/Biol./Gen. Sci./Coa. Foot- bal, FE/Engl/Coa. Intermurals, Berkley, Mich.-Jr. HS Latin/Engl.,I Gen. Sci., Math; HS Psych/Gov't., Chem., Alg/Geom., Couns., Engl., Comm. Math/Geom., Trig/Geom., Geom., Typ- ing. Dowaglac, Mich.-Elem.; Jr. HS Engl., Girl's PE, Span./Fre. Frankenmuth, Mich.-German, Engl/ Speech, Eleni. Muskegon Heights, Mich.-Jr. HS Art, Orchestra, Ment. Retard.; HS Vocal, 'Band (Experience), Auto Mechanics, Spanish, French/Engl., Math. Otsego, Mich.-Elem. (Early & Upper); Comm (Short/Typ., etc.). Rockwood, Mich. (Gibralter Sch. Dist.) -Elem.; Jr. HS Si/Math. West Branch, Mich.-Fields not an- nounced. I TUES., APRIL 24- 500 YDS. FROM UNION Ann Arbor's most deluxe and spacious apts. Ready for June and Sept. occupancy Completely air conditioned for three or four If you are responsible people- applications now being accepted PHONE NO 3-6357 Battle Creek, Mich.-Elem.; Jr. HS Engl/SS, Gen. Set., Gen. Math; HS Engl., Math, Girl's PE, Set. Dearborn, Mich. (Dist. No. 4) - Jr. HS Eng., Math, Art, Vocal HS Math, Ind. Arts, Journ/Speech/Drama, Phys. Sci./Health/Natural Hist., Home Ec., Libr., Counselor (Girl's). Deckerville, Mich.-Later Elem.; Band, Engl.; HS. Engl. Fowlerville, Mich. - Elem.; Jr. HS Engl.; HS Fre/Engl. Livonia, Mich.-Al fields.' Oak Park, Mich.-Elem., Elem. Libr., Voc. Mus., Strings, PE, Spec. Educ., Ment. Handi., Perceptual Devel., Sp. Ther.; Jr. HS Art, Engl/SS, Math, Set. Voc. Mus., Span., Span/Fre., PE (Boy's), Libr., HS SS, Span., Homemaking. St. Clair, Mich. - Elem., Elem. FE, Libr. Core. Spec. Educ., (Type A); Jr. HS Type A; Phys/Chem., Guid., Home Ec., Art, Vocal & Inst., HS Engl. Walled Lake, Mich.-Elem., Elem. Vo- cal, Secondary Engl., Biol/Math, Comm., Gen. Sci., Home Ec., Ind. Arts, Sp.1 Ther., Ment, Hands., Emot. Dist. Oxnard, Calf.-"," 2 &3rd grades; In- st. Music, Sp. Ther. List to be continued tomorrow. ** * For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, 663-1511, Ext. 3547. ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please sign interview schedule at 128-H West Engrg. APRIL 19 (p.m.)- 'i Associated Spring Corp., Conn., Mich., Ill., Penna. & Calif.-BS: CE, ME & Met. June & Aug. grads. Sales & Prod. APRIL 19-. Electro-Voice, Inc., Buchanan. Mich. -BS-MS: EE. BS: E Physics & ME.rJune & Aug. grads. Both Men & Women. Prod. Dev. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, O.-BS: ChE & ME. Summer Employ-y ment: Jrs. completing Jr. year in ChE or ME in top 50 per cent of class. Des., R. &D. Grand Rapids Hardware Co., Grand Rapids, Big Rapids & Saranac-BS: ME. Must pass physical exam. R. & D., Ind. Engrg. White Motor Co., White Div., Cleve- land, O.-BS-MS: EE & ME. June & Aug. grads. R. & D., Sales & Prod. APRIL 20-- Kordite Co., Sales positions in all ma- jor cities; Mktg. Hdqts. located near Rochester, N.Y.-BS-MS: ChE, EE, EM, IE & ME. BS: Sci. Engrg. June & Aug. grads. Military service completed. Sales. APRIL 23- Link-Belt Co., Chicago, Ill.-BS: CE & ME. June & Aug. grads. Des. & Sales. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES Cercle Francais, Movie: "Quai des' Brumes" - directed by Marcel Carne with Jean Gabin and Michele Morgan, in French, April 18, 8 p.m., UGLI, Mul- tipurpose Rm. * * * German Club, Coffee Hour, German conversation, music, singing-"Herzlich willkommen!" April 18, 2-4 p.m., FB. WAA Tennis Club, Women's Tennis Team Tryouts, April 18-5:10 p.m., April 19-4:10 p.m., April 21-9:30 a.m., Palmer Field. DYEABLE. PUMPS to Enhance your N ~Spring formal!. SATIN or LINEN High and Mid Heels CUSTOM TINTING f3 FREE POM POM DYEAB LE CAMPUS BOOTERY 304' S. State, St. Students 'Report' Faculty HARTFORD, Conn. (1) - Stu- dents at Trinity College have turned in a surprise "faculty" re- port card. Naming names and not generally observing the niceties, the 78-page document drew angry reactions from the professors who " lunked." "It is inconceivable that the ad- ministration should permit publi- cation of such a report," com- mented the head of one depart- ment described as having a "gen- erally poor curriculum." Another, the fine arts depart- ment, was written off as being chiefly concerned with "education of the student for polite conver- sation." Not Strict Enough- In general, professors were criti- cized for being too easy going. One was "not strict enough," while another was viewed as being "in- effectual." The study, drawn up under the sponsorship of the college senate also entered the field of non-aca- demic matters, such as the honor system of chapel attendance. The chapel activities at the Episcopalian-founded school were seen as openly flouted. It was charged that most men leave Trin- ity with "less religious reverence than was their upon entrance." Architecture The 40 authors of the report also touched on architecture, ex- pressing apprehension over wheth- er new additions would spoil "the architectural harmony which gives Trinity its traditional character." The college is noted for its English gothic chapel, furnished with hand-carved pews. One of the Finest Despite all, the student critics concluded that Trinity, a private men's college with an enrollment of 950, is still "one of the finest schools in the nation, and this report is an attempt to improve further this institution." A more serious charge of im- moral activities among the stu- dents was leveled. Even the students didn't escape uncriticized. The typical Trinity undergraduate, it said, "does not have any concept of what educa- tion involves, nor does he give any indication of wanting to find out." Trinity's President Dr. Albert C. Jacobs, Trinity's president, said the students don't appreciate some of the problems an administrator faces -lack of funds, for instance. Noting the "considerable matur- ity of those who wrote it, Jacobs forwarded the lengthy report card, together with footnotes from en- raged faculy members, to the col- lege trustees., The trustees may wonder wist- fully whatever happened to the happy-go-lucky kids in the rac- coon coats. e FOR RENT DO YOU REALLY believe in integrated housing? Do you want good housing at moderate cost? Do you want a beautiful new modern apartment? 1, 2, 3 bedroom apartments. New reduced rents $72.00 to $92.00 per month. Call Willow Village Apartments, HU 3- 1253 C6 SHARP 6 room house near campus for 6 (or 5) students. Summer and/o winter. Call NO 5-0811. C5 NEW LARGE air-cond. apt. for 4. Packard & Madison S. Quad. ext. 442. C4 SUBLET June-Sept. 3 rooms, furn. pool, 1500 Pauline. NO 5-0755 after 6. C3 CAMPUS - fully furnished; 3-bdrm. house, avail. May. 665-0439. C2 SUMMER-modern furnished apt. for 2. 1309 S. Univer. Call 665-0164. Cl 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT for June or September. NO 3-6357. C21 AVAILABLE IN JUNE: One room effi- ciency furnished apartment and three room furnished apartment for couple. Close to campus. NO 3-4325. C20 FURNISHED HOME FOR 4 STUDENTS 2 BLKS. FROM CAMPUS AVAILABLE JUNE 15th NOrmandy 3-5098 C9 SUMMER-Redecorated apt. for three. 1005 Packard. $145/mo. includes gar- age. Call NO 2-9181. C5 ON CAMPUS. Now taking applications for summer and fall furnished apart- ments and parking. Call NO 2-1443. C12 A LIMITED NUMBER of efficiency one bedroom and two bedroom apartments available in April, May, and June. Apply at University Family Housing Office, 2364 Bishop Street, North Campus, or phone 662-3169 or 663- 1511, ext. 3569. C4 FURNISHED APARTMENTS TOO! More of everything for everybody at Huron Towers . . . we can furnish the apartment of your choice at reasonable additional monthly rates (rates on request) . . . we bus our tenants to campus, downtown, hos- pitalrarea in ourprivate "Trans- porter". . We' have large private grounds with patio, swimming pool and sun decks . . . carriage room for "garaging" strollers. We heat and air condition your apartment. Shops of f the lobby which include Marilyn Mark's Hair Stylists, Trojan Laundry, O'Grady Barbers will serve most daily needs. But see it all for yourself. Model apartments open 9 to 6 p.m. daily. UNFURNISHED $98 to $330. FUR- NISHED FROM $133.', NINE- OR TWELVE-MONTH LEASES WITH PERMISSION TO SUBLET. HURON TOWERS APARTMENTS 2200 Fuller Road NOrmandy 3-0800, 5-9161 C24 BARGAIN CORNER ATTENTION ROTC OFFICERS' SHOES Army-Navy Oxfords - $7.95 Socks 39c Shorts 69c Military Supplies SAM'S STORE 122 E. WASHINGTON WO WANTED TO BUY WANTED-Two tickets to Russian Con- cert of May Festival Series. Call NO 3-1561, ext. 232. E7 LINES 2 3 4 .70 .85 1.00 1.95 2.40 2.85 I DAY 3 DAYS Figure 5' average words to a line. Phone NO 2-4786 ....,r r..iY.r MISCELLANEOUS A NIGHT WITH THE CRIME SQUAD Under cover of the San Francisco fog, anything can happen: rape, rob- bery, murder. And it's the job of the S Squad to stop these crimes before they start. This week, a Post writer tells how a squad of undercover cops cracks down on ,hoods. Says how they keep their activities hushed up. And gives an hour-by-hour report of a typical night's police work. The Saturday Evening' APRIL 2t posT ON SALEO MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES THE NEW YORK TIMES delivered daily. Student Newrpaper Agency, P0 Box 241, Ann Arbor, Michigan.' M10 FOR SALE FOR SALE-?-carat diamond ring and matching wedding ring, never been used; white gold, $250. L. D. Miller, NO 3-5480 or NO 3-1511, Ext. 2450. B5 POODLE-Beautiful, toy male puppy. Must sell immediately. Terms possible. Call 665-7939. B2 BIKES and SCOOTERS 1960 Cushman Super Eagle. Eight horse- power, excellent condition. GReen- wood 9-2181. Z1 FOR SALE-2 men's lightweight bi- cycles. 1 with 3 speed shift, excellent cond. Phone 668-8150 after 6 p.m. Z3 MOTOR SCOOTER, 1960. Red BELLA, costs over $600 new, must sacrifice $230. Call Rich Weiser, 3-6628 or 3- 4211. Z2 WILL PAY IMMEDIATE CASH for your motor scooter, up to $85 to $125 or more. Write Michigan Daily, Box 2. Z1 BUSINESS SERVICES HI-FI, PHONO TV, and radio repair. Clip this ad for free pickup and de- livery. Campus Radio and TV, 325 E. Hoover. NO 5-6644. 124 BEFORE you buy a class ring, look at the official Michigan ring. Burr-Pat- terson and Auld Co. 1209 South Uni- versity, NO 8-8887. J11 GUITAR AND BANJO INSTRUCTION. Beginner and advanced. Individ- ual and small workshop groups. Classical, folk, popular. Cali 663- 6942. J20 A-1 New and Used Instruments' BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-1834 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES FOREIGN CAR SERVICE'. We service all makes and mndels of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sates. 514 E. Washington 82 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE FRIENDLY SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS Stop in now for brake work, engine tune-up, battery and tire check-up. South University & Forest NO 8-9168 .4 HELP WANTED REGISTERED NURSE for boys' private summer camp in Wisconsin. June 28 to August 16.: Write Box 3, Michigan Daily,. or phone collect TUxedo 5-0346. 119 COUNSELORS (June 27 to August 26)-- for Jayson Camps in the Massachu- setts Berkshires. Monterery for Boys; Owaissa for Girls. 37th season. Open- ings for upperclassrr en and teachers: American Red Cross Water Safety and Small Craft Instructors, water-skiing, tennis, riflery, archery, pioneering, dance, dramatics, athletics and gen- eral; also pianist, play songs and popular music by ear, expert at trans- posing. College Interview forms may be obtained at 3200 Student Activities Building, where camp brochures are on display. Applicants can be inter- viewed by Mr. Jayson on the Michi- gan Campus on April -18, 19, and 20. H8 6 DAYS 3145 4.20 4.95 LOST AND FOUND LOST: 'a painting, untacked from its frame, 46 inches x 40 inches on Marc 5, in the vicinity of Williams and division. Subject matter with stil life, reclining dog, checkered (red and black) pattern in background. If any information is known about its whereabouts, write to Lost Paint- ing 271 Francisco St., San Francisco California. A4 LOST-One black men's topcoat. Bought at McGowan's Men's Store. Lost at SDT Open House Sunday. Call Bil Irwin at NO 2-5571. All PERSONAL 8,000 SUMMER JOBS NATIONWIDE to $600/mo. All fields-Coeds included Complete listings $1.00. Act now! Col lege Job Mart, Glendale Bldg., 22 Glendale Ave., Lexington, Kentucky F14 EXPERIMENTERS to Western Europe Care to discuss summer plans with others on the program? Call Marty, 3-1561, ext. 345 or Darlene in Barbour 2-2591. F1 DISPOSING of my large library at pri vate sale. Rare opportunity for stu dents to build up alibrary of good books at low prices. Special low prices on sets of books. Showings a 617 Packard St. (near State) from I p.m. to 4 p.m. every day except Sun day. Fl FOR SALE.- One lighter for '54 red Ford convertible. Will trade for on tube of lipstick (probably under book case) and a few beers. Call Ext. 92 or 918. F1 SUMMERTIME ADVENTURE I plan on traveling all around the U.S. (including Alaska), Canada, and Mexico. I have room for three tgaveling companions, preferably male, who want to share in this adventure. Method of travel il be by 'private airplane, new this year, There will be no set destinations, we'll just go where the fun is and stir up some where there isn't any. The main objective of this trip will be to seek excitement. Tentative plans are for a trip of 6 to 8 weeks 'duration which will cost around4 $1600 per person excluding personal expenses. This is the chance of a lifetime, so take advantage of it now and write for further details to Patl Air Lines, 1821 W.,Milham, Kalama- zoo, Michigan. F18 GIRL WANTED to make bathrobe- have pattern and terry cloth m~aterial Call Ed, NO 5-6117. F TERM INSURANCE - 1958 mortality rates lowest in Michigan. Example Age 25, $115.50 -per $25,000. Cal 662-4800. F GIRL WANTED to share 4-bedroor house with 3 other girls on Packard NO 3-1342. FI LEAGUE PETITIONING NOW OPEN! Hurry! Pick up your petition in th League Undergrad office. F DIAMONDS WHOLESALE-Save'$100 to $500. Robert Haack Diamond Import ers, First 'National Bldg., Suite 504, by appointment only. NO 3-0653. P2 USED CARS 59 RENAULT-DAUPHIN, R&H, new mo tor, absolhutely no rust, $495. NO 5- 3217. Ni 1953 Zimdapp. 200 cc. engine. Gold cond. 4n, Call HU 2-5760, ext. 305. N 1959 SIMCA, 4-door sedan, good conc $450, NO 3-4747. NE 60 tAUSTIN-HEALY. 10,000 miles. Goo clean car. Call 665-6232. N1 '56 MG, sharp. 221 Chicago House, NI 2-4401. NF 1956 MGA Blue, good condition. Cal NO 5-9556. N5 57 CHEVROLET-6 cylinder, 2-door radio and heater, mechanically good $500. NO 3-7966. N( Lu Lu Girl Watcher's Guide Presented by Pall Mali Famous Cigarettes 1 w) The mover is more of a girl scout than a girl watcher. OUR MISTAKE It's Dylan* as in Thomas not Dillon As in MATT. * Columbia Recording Artist apgearing this Sunday, 2 P.M. at Michigan Union 90c Captivatin j Coat I [6[ 3®@[2 0 Watching at a beach or pool BEAUTIFUL FABRICS Many light-os-a-feather Foam-Back Beauties Beautiful Silhouettes BEAUTIFUL COLORS- Cloud Beige, soft aquas Blues - Black - Navy Sizes from 5 BEAUTIFUL VALUES from 19.95 Illustrated is a weightless wonder-the most approved coat of the season of foam and backed rayon crepe with silken look. Navy and black. 29.95 The flattering bow front hat 8.98. Other smart hots, too from 3.00 to 12.95 FOWNES 6-button length stretch fabric gloves 3.00 of stretch capeskin at 6.50 From out of a beautiful collection of coats and accessories on the First Floor When watching at the beach or pool it is not necessary to keep moving. In fact, it is unwise to move at all, un- less the watcher actually enjoys swimming. In such cases he should swim. At the beach it is better to stay in one place, because the mover is more of a girl scout than a girl watcher (see above). He is somewhat like the man who goes to the theater to see girls. The girl watcher goes to a musical and happens to notice the beautiful girls. The scout goes to see the girls and, sometimes, happens to notice the musical. (Whether you're a watcher or a scout, you'll find Pall Mall makes a most pleasant companion.) Pall Mall's natural mildnessf is so good :::: I i I _ lonT M I