L 19, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGEF A A"li x RESEARCH CONFERENCE: Spencer Urges Creation Of Reserve Lake Fleet DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING By BUEL TRAPNELL Lyndon Spencer, .,president of the Lakes Carriers .Association, urged Monday that the United States government create a re- serve fleet of Great Lakes vessels for the twofold purpose of en- couraging Lakes vessells operators' and preparing for a national emergency. Speaking at the Great Lakes Research Conference which end- ed yesterday, he said, "such a fleet would be of great value if in the event of a national emergency, the importation of iron ore from foreign sources other than Cana- da were not possible." He added that the large ocean- going ships maintained by the Maritime Administration make it apparent that the government rec-' Frosh Women To Com ete O p Freshman women, divided into opposing Maize and Blue teams, will present, the annual Frosh! Weekend at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in the League Ballroom. The teams compete on the basis of originality of theme and the appropriateness of that theme of their publicity and decorations for a dance and two complete floor- shows. Ticket sales are also art of the contest. Each operates. on a different theme- which is kept secret and allowed to leak .out slowly through publeity stunts and posters until it'is finally revealed in the dance decorations -and floorshow. All that is yet known about the themes is that Maize publicity bears the name "Les Maizerables" and Blue team's byword is "Blue- sheviks, Revolt!" Each team is given one half of the. ballroom to decorate and equal time to"present its floorshow. A committee of judges com- posed of faculty members, admin- istrative officials and student leaders then announce the win- ner of the weekend. ognizes the strategic value ships. Operators Encouraged of "United States operators of ves- sels on the Great Lakes would be much encouraged if the govern- ment would establish such a re- serve fleet through the purchase of some older ships,. not just at their scrap value, but at a price which would recognize the use- fulness of the vessels." Spencer also attacked the Unit- ed States depreciation policy as "the principal reason we have so many old ships in operation." He called for an improvement in that policy, which would encourage United States operators to build ships better able to compete with the many modern Canadian .ves- sels. He asserted that nearly 60 years must elapse before a United States operator can recover the money he puts into a ship. Since the cost of a new ship has increased over eightfold in the last 60 years, re- covery of the original investment does not go far toward building a.' new vessel. Advantage for Canada He cited the advantage the pres- ent policies give Canadian opera- tors, who can depreciate their in- vestment at 15 per cent a year. Spencer was the speaker at the Great Lakes Research Conference dinner. The two-day conference con- sisted mainly of the presentation of over 30 papers in the fields of lake metabolism and productivity, lake levels, physical limnology, water chemistry and pollution, geology, meteorology, economics, biology and research programs.. It was sponsored by the Great Lakes Research Division of the Institute of Science and Technolo- gy, with the cooperation of the University Extension Service. .to Mail, Quad,. Dorm Deposit Residence. halls deposits will be returned by mail during the sum- mer replacing the two-day distri- bution at the cashier's office, resi- dence hall business manager Leon- ard A. Schaadt said yesterday. Schaadt said that the new sys- tem would alleviate crowds at the cashier's office, where over 3,000 of the $50 deposits were returned in a two day period.. Assistant Dean of Men for resi- dence halls John Hale noted that a summer mailing would relieve the students of having to go to four separate places for their re- fund. (Continued from Page 4) must be withheld until the approval has become effective. April 26 Student Offices of the Mich- igan Union,. speaker the Honorable Shaul Ramati, "The.Case of the Peo- ple of Israel vs. Adolf Eichmann," Un- ion Ballroom, 7:30 p.m. Foreign Visitors Following are the foreign visitors who will be on the campus this week on the dates indicated. Program arrangements for the fol- lowing visitors are being made by Rich- ard K. Beardsley, Center for Japanese Studies and the Far Eastern Studies Program. Prof. Motoka, Kyoto University, Ja- pan, April 16-21.. Prof. Tanase, Kyoto University, Ja- pan, April 16-21. Prof. Usui, Kyoto University, Japan, April 16-21. Program arrangements for the fol- lowing visitor are being made by Dr. Myron Wegman, Dean, School of Pub- 11a Health. Dr. Theodore .Gurjevic, Registrar of National School of Public Health, Za- greb, Yugoslavia, April 17-25. Program arrangements for the fol- lowing visitor are being made by Prof. Eric Stein, Law School. Dr. Ivo Samkalden, accompanied by Mrs. Samkalden, Professor of Law of International Organizations, Univ. of Leiden, Leiden, The Netherlands, April 18-20. Program arrangements for the fol- lowing visitor are being made by Dr. Gordon E. Peterson, Director, Com- munications Sciences Laboratory. Dr. Janusz Kacprowski, Head of Elec- tro-Acoutitics Lab, Institute of Basic Technical Problems, Polish Academy,, Poland, April 18-May 10. Program arrangements for the fol- lowing visitor are being made by Dr. John F. Weir, English Language Insti- tute. Nacif Edmon Jorge Japour, Senior Administrative Asst., Binational Cen- ter, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, April 20-22. Program arrangements for the fol- lowing visitor are being made by the School of Engineering (Dr. V. Arpaci). Dr. , F. Narter, Rector, Technical Univ., Istanbul, Turkey, April 23-25. Program arrangements for the fol- lowing visitors are being made by the ,, organization Notices Any student organization wishing to calendar an event(s) for the school year 1961-62 may send or bring their requests (indicate the nature of the event and your choices for dates for the event) to the Calendaring Commit- tee of Student Government Council in the Student Activities Building. The deadline for requests, for calendaring is April 24, 1961. Am. Soc. for Public Administration, April 20,..8 p.m., Rackham Bldg., W. Conf. Rm. Speaker: W. K. Willman, City Mgr. Pontiac, "The Challenge and Opportunity of a Management Career." Russian Circle, Pilm: "Tice Childhood of Maksim Gorky," April 20, 7:30 p.m., Undergrad. Lib., Multipurpose Rm. Wesley Fdn., Mid-Week Refresher, April 19, 4-5 p.m., Wesley Lounge. o* s La Sociedad Hispanica, "Viaje a traves de Mexico," colored slides, Mexican mu- sic, William Robinson narrator, Danc- ing refreshments, April 20, 8 p.m., 3050 FB. Vengan todosi International Center: Mrs. Henry J. Meyer. Mamadou Diakite, Secretary of State for Defense, Republic of Mali, April 22- 23. Lt. A. Danfaga, Escort for Mr. Dia- kite, Republic of Mali, April 22-23. Arva C. Floyd, U.S. State Dept. Es- cort for Mr. Diakite, U.S.A., April 22-23. Events Wednesday The 1961 Joint Memorial Meeting of the University Research Club, Women's Research Club and the Science Research Club will be on Wed., April 19 at 8 p.m. In the Rackham Amphitheater. Theme: The American Civil War. Pa- pers: Prof. Dwight L. Dumond, "The Meaning of the Civil war." Prof. F. Clever Bald, "Michigan Men in the Civil War." Wives and spouses are cordially invited. Events Thursday Recital: Sidney F. Giles, Assistant University Carollonneur, will present a recital on Thurs., April 20 at 7:15 p.m. eH will play compositions for the Carillon by B. J. Franssen and Staf Nees as well as selections arranged for the Carillon, Laboratory Playbill: Tomorrow at 4:10 p.m.ntheADepartment of Speech will present "A Hasty Trip to the Caspian Sea," by Ronald Sproat. The perform- ance will be in Trueblood Aud., Frieze Bldg. Admission free. April 20, Thurs., 8:00 p.m., Aud. B: Lecture by Zbigniew K. Brzezinski, As- sociate Prof. of Public Law and Gov- ernment, The Russian Institute, Colum- bia University, on "The Challenge of Change in the Soviet Bloc." American Chemical Society Lecture: Thurs., April 20, 8:00 p.m., 1300 Chem- istry Bldg. Prof. J. W. Cornforth, Aus- tralian National University, will speak on "Experiments on Synthesis of Vita- min B-12." Aeronautical and Astronautical En- gineering Lecture: Dr. Gordon N. Pat- terson, Director, Institute of Aero- physics, University of Toronto, will talk on "Aerodynamics of Highly Rare- fied Gases," Thurs., April 20, 3:00 p.m., 1503 East Engineering. Bldg. Lecture: Prof. Karl Wittfogel will discuss "The Theory ofrOriental Des- potism" on Thurs., April 20 at 4:10 p.m. in Aud. A. He will also speak in- formally at 8:30 p.m. in the East Lec- ture Room, Rackham Bldg., on "The Dynamics of the Communist World." Prof. Germaine Bre, Institute for Research in the Humanities, University of Wisconsin, will lecture on "La Jeune Posie Francaise," Thurs., April 20, at 4:10 p.m, in Aud. B. Public Administration Social Semi- nar: Walter K. Willman, City Manager, Pontiac, and President, International City Managers Assn. will speak on "The Challenge and Opportunity of a Man- agement Career" on Thurs., April 20 at 8 p.m. in the West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Coffee follows. Every- one welcome. Applied Mathematics Seminar: Prof. N. Coburn will speak on "Solutions of the Non-steady Hydromagnetic Equa- tions," Thurs., April 20, at 4:00 p.m. in 246 West Engineering. Refreshments in 274 West Engineer- ing at 3:30 pm. Doctoral Examination for Floyd Ver- anus Monaghan, Educatiou; thesis: "The Effect of Delay of Knowledge of Test Results on Learning in a Natural Science Course," Thurs., April 20, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 10:00 a.m. Pl acement Reminder to Seniors, Recent Grads: Federal service entrance exam, sched- uled periodically, to be given May 13. Applications must be filed by April 27. On Thurs., April 20 and Fri., April 21, a representative fom Radcliffe College, Harvard University will be at the Bu- reau of Appointments to interview lib- eral arts graduates who are interested in a Master of Arts in Teaching pro- gram. Previous course work in educa- tion is not required for admission to this program. For additional informa- tion and appointments contact the Bu- reau of Appointments, Education Divi- sion, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad. stu- dents, please call Ext. 3371 for inter- view appointments with the following: MON., APRIL 24- Remington Rand Univac, Division of Sperry Rand Corp., Chicago (a.m.) - Location: Branch offices throughout 33 states. Men with degrees in Econ., Bus., Ad., or Gen Lib. Arts for Sales -Professional Salesmen. Offer nearly 18 mos. of paid trng. TUES., APRIL 25- Abraham & Straus, New York (p.m.) -Men & WOMEN with degrees in Lib. Arts & Bus. Ad. for Mgmt. Trng. Merchandising, Retailing, Statistics, & Sales. Openings in each of 5 main divs. of store: Admin.; Merchandising; Con- trol Finance & Acctg.; Personnel: Sales Promotion. Formal Executive Trng.-6 Mos. Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C. - Men & WOMEN with degrees in Lib. Arts, Bus. Ad., Law, Public Admin. for Mgmt. Intern Program and Economics, Statistics, & Public Policy Work. American Institute for Foreign Trade, Phoenix, Ariz.-Men & WOMEN with degree in any field for one yr. grad- uate school specialized in training col- lege grads for exec. positions with companies having branches in all parts of the world. Practical trng. in con- duct or international business as well as general orientation for living & working abroad. Curriculum: Foreign Trade, Area Studies, Language Studies. SUMMER PLACEMENT INTERVIEW: APRIL 19- Nisswa Summer Theatre. Nisswa, Minn,-Tryouts TODAY from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m. at Michigan League or call NO 3-4166 for special appointment. For further information, visit the Summer Placement Service, D-528 SAB. Open Mon. through Thurs., 1:00 to 5:00 and all day Friday. Specially open SAT., APRIL 23 for extra camp inter- viewing. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Wilson & Co., Chicago-Chem. E. for Pilot Plant-Prefer MS withBseveral yrs. exper. but will consider BS with heavy exper. in pertinent field. Also, Physical Chemist-PhD or its equiva- lent in exper. Hardware Mutuals, Grand Rapids, Mich.-Claims Adjuster. Any degree- any field. Req. sales personality. No exper. necessary. Teachers Insurance & Annuity Assn. of America, College Retirement Equities Fund, NYC-Research Associate-Econ- omist. PhD, either grad, or '61 degree candidate, in Econ. or Bus. Ad. TIAA works in cooperation with foundations, etc., in projects related to financing & staffing of educational institutions. Belle Jacob, Inc., Detroit-Asst. Mer- chandsing Manager for retail ladies' ready-to-wear store. 'BA with Acctg. background. Man or WOMAN. Delco; Moraine (Div. of General Mo- tors Corp.), Dayton, Ohio-BS in ME or Engrg. Mechanics for Res. & Dev. Sec- tiori of Engrg. Dept. 5-8 yrs. exper. in Engrg. Resign & Devel. or related area. Please contact Bureau of Appts, 4021 Admin., Ext. 3371 for further informa- tion, Part-Time Employment The following part - time jobs are available. Applications for these jobs can be made in the Non-Academic Personnel Office, 1020 Admin Bldg. Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring part- time or temporary employes should contact Jack Lardie at NO 3-1511, ext. 2939. Students desiring miscellaneous jobs should consult the bulletin board in Rm. 1020 daily. MEN 1-Animal caretaker, 8 a.m.-12 noon, Monday-Friday for approximately 2-3 weeks. 1-Dishwasher, evening hours. 1-Interviewer. 3-Meal jobs. 1-Busboy, 12 noon-1:30 p.m., Mon- day-Saturday. 1-Experienced bus driver, Saturday mornings only. FEMALE 1-Full-time temporary typist. 1-Interviewer. 2-Telephone solicitors, as many hours as possible. 1-Typist, 8 a.m.-12 noon, Monday- Friday. 1-Student wife with training in Arts & Crafts, or Occupational Therapy, 2.30-10:30 p.m., 5 days/week. BUSINESS SERVICES RITZ BEAUTY SALON Complete line of Beauty Work 605 E. WILLIAM Phone NO 8-7066 4 CAMPUS OPTICIANS Most frames replaced while you wait. Broken lenses duplicated. FAST service on all repairs. LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .80 .96 1.12 SPECIAL TEN-DAY RATE .39 .47 .54 Figure 5 average words to a line. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786 I 240 NICKELS ARCADE NO 2-9116 NO 8-6019 J73 ON PACKARD around the corner from State St. is the place for the very best foods in town. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 5-7131 J50 TYPING, quick efficient, 12 yrs. expe- rience. Call NO 3-9935. J15 USED CARS 1952 MERCEDES. 220 4-door sedan. Ex- cellent condition. $950. Call Jim. NO 5-8480. N23 1960 CORVAIR, Deluxe coupe. Standard shift, whitewalls, heater & radio. Good condition. $1395. NO 2-8820. N25 '51 FORD. Stick shift. 4-door, good transportation. $95. NO 3-9697. N24 PACKARD 1955, 2 door hard top, $200. NO 3-1511, ext. 2953 8-5, NO 5-4017 after 6 p.m. N22 '53 PLYMOUTH convertible. $225. Call NO 3-4856 after 8 p.m. N21 1952 FORD, good running condition, full tread tires, $80. NO 2-7816. N20 AUSTIN-HEALY, 1957, 100-6 Roadster 4 seater. Overdrive, metallic blue lac- quer. silver wire wheels, black leather interior, black top, tonneau, radio, heater. Lucas fog lamps, sliding alum- inum windows, complete tools, own- er's manual. Like new. Ownerschool teacher. $1,775. Lincoln 5-8614 Oak Park (Detroit suburb). N18 BIKES and SCOOTERS 1960 MOPED; Excellent condition, ex- tras, $125 complete. NO 3-1022 before 8 p.m. Z35 BARGAIN CORNER ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks 39c; shorts 69c; military supplies. SAM'S STORE, 122 E. Washington W1 FOR SALE '55 DODGE, 2 dr. hd top V-8, excellent buy, $275. NO 2-2234. B39 BRAND NEW Royal typewriter, retails $120, selling for $75. Won in contest. NO 5-6341 after 10 p.m. or before 9 a.m. B40 THE.BOOK CORNER, above Treasure Mart, 509 Detroit St. Open Fri. 6-9, Sat. 9-5. "Any book anywhere." NO 2- 5941. K 1957 SCHULT Mobile Home, 1 bedroom. Call HU 2-3532. , B93 INCOME HOUSE: by a student owner. Gross income.$300 per conth. Campus location. Call NO 2-6094 evenings. B7 ONE HI FI Record Player and 8" ex- tension speaker for $75. 1 Bell tape recorder for $100, both in good cond. Call after 6 P.M. NO 3-7050. B31 FOR SALE-Small business. Ideal for one, two college students. Can be operated from space the size of a work bench. Requires a few hours a week. For further information-HU 3-3493. Cash, $250. B35 - -- - _ PHOTO SUPPLIES MOVIE CAMERA Canon ZM8, F1.4, w/case. Trans. radio, 6&7 Trs. All brand new. Bargain. Call NO 3-2684 or leave message with NO 3-4288. $76 FOR RENT FORMER DOUBLE now being rented as single. Large, clean room. Linen. Park- ing and refrigerator. $35 per month. Located next to E. Quad, 1108 Hill St. Call Dan, NO 5-7930. C83 SUMMER: Modern 2 bedroom furn. apt., air conditioned, dish washer, disposal, parking. 2 blocks from cam- pus & hospital. Phone NO 8-7651. C74 TO RENT: Modern summer apartment, 2 bedrooms, electric kitchen, air con- ditioned, fully furnished. 2 blocks from campus. Call NO 3-4028. C79 APT. FOR RENT. New furn. apt, for 4 available for summer. 1 block from campus. Parking facilities available. NO 3-1828 . C78 NOB HILLrapartment to sublet for summer or to rent. $75 per month. NO 3-3000. Call after 4 P.M. C80 SUMMER: Modnrnly furnished, spa- cious, 6% z room apartment. Can ac- commodate 4-6 persons. Parking on campus, reasonable. 5-7824. C81 MODERN 2 bedroom apt, near hospi- tal. Available June 1. NO 5-7092. C82 SUMMER-sublet, completely furnished one bedroom modern Arbordale Man- or Apt. Including TV, air cond., dis- posal, etc. $95. NO 3-4856. C77 TWO BEDROOM Furnished Apt. Three or four persons. Very reasonable. NO 3-4402. C73 SOUTH STATE and Hill. Newly deco- rated and furnished 2- and 3-room apartments, $80-$100. NOr 3-2800. C69 SUMMER apartment near campus. 3 furnished rooms and bath. $90 per month. Call 3-0618 after 6 P.M. C68 SUMMER modern two bedroom fur- nished apartmet near campus and both hospitals; disposal, parking, other features. NO 3-6249. C76 FURNISHED 4 bedroom home, p,'2 baths, porch, secluded yard. Available May 20-Sept. 10. $160 per month, less for entire time. Car included. 3-8494. C72 WANTED, working girl or part-time student to share apartment close to campus and hospital. Call NO 2-9731 evenings. C159 FOR RENT: 3 room apartment on cam- pus. Will accommodate 3 men. Pri- vate bath with shower, automatic washer acid dryer, private parking, and one-room apartment. Call NO 5- 4767, or call N. Basement door, 1021 E. Huron St. between 9 and 5 daily. C65 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. BUSINESS PERSONAL 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. FF2 LOST AND FOUND FOUND: 15 weeks (a full semester) of interesting, newsy reading. This was found on the Diag., Jan. 28, 1961 and the owner is wanted desperately. Please call NO 2-3241 for information and fin da semester's DAILY sub- scription as a reward (only $4.00 too), Al HELP WANTED SUMMER: Help wanted-riding co selors for private girls' camp in nor ern Michigan dune country horses, Eastern style. Contact Leinbach. NO 3-0067. I TEACHERS WANTED: $5000 and Up Vacancies in all western states. In- quire Columbine Teachers Agency, 1320 Pearl, Boulder, Colorado, 1135 DO YOU qualify? Neat, intelligent, as bitious. 3 college students needed t work part time for top paying sale promotions positions. Call NO 5-895 for interview. WANTED: Baby Sitter to live in yes round. Weekends and some evening free. References required. NO 2-999 after 5:30 p.m. MUSICAL MDSE-, RADIOS, REPAIRS FOR SALE: Wilcox Gay Mono-Recorde WL.bcor Mono-record Stereo Play back-Viking 75 Stereo record an playback. 57170 & 37481. X1 Pilot 12 watt Mono Ark. How much? $2 to anyone at all-WE TAKE TRADE, Our 595 Diamond needles ARE FULL GUARANTEED. Ann Arbor Hi Fi an TV Center-across from Hill Aud. N( 5-8607. Service and repairs. X1 A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-1834 FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY All RCA Victor Records U I Grinnell's Big Store downtown 323 S. Main NO 2-5667 - X1 Lubrication $1.50 11 An understanding of the truth contained in Science and Health with Key to the Scrip- tures by Mary Baker Eddy can remove the pressure which con- cerns today's college student upon whom increasing de- mands are being made for academic excellence. Christian Science calms fear and gives to the student the full assurance he needs in order to learn easily and to evaluate what he has learned. It teaches that God is man's Mind-his only Mind-from which ema- nates all the intelligence he needs, when and as he needs it. Science and Health, the text- book of Christian Science, may be read or examined, together with the Bible, in an atmos- phere of quiet and peace, at any Christian Science Reading Room. Information about Sci- ence and Health may also be ob- tained on campus through the Christian Science xOrgfanizatin.at Second lecture in series on "NATIONAL SOCIALISM AND THE JEWS" All Welcome 1429 Hill St. 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 S2 BUMPING, PAINTING, all kinds of auto repairs. Free estimates. Call NO 5-4042 J. B. Auto Repair 318 N. First Street S2 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessories. Complete Automotive Service-Al products and services guaranteed. Road Service "You expect more from Standard and you get it." 1220 South Universityj NO 8-9168 82) TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Ride to Cornell or area week- end of May 13. Share driving and ex- penses. Rita Levant. NO 2-2545. G13 ' I F LL E T T' S PHOTO DEPARTMENT State St. at N. University PERSONAL To MAIZE MENACE: See you on Diag at 1 o'clock. CUPID P192 What Great Books II class now holds its sessions in the Virginian? F193 SARAH VAUGHAN sang for the Acad- emy Awards Mon. night. See her sing for you in person at the SPRING WEEKEND dance on April 29. Tickets only $3.50 per couple. P191 If you're upset by midterms, freezing to the bone from the cold April snow, plagued by loads of papers, buy your- self a ticket to SPRING WEEKEND. F181 Join the DAILY and see the world - through an Associated Press Teletype Machine. F11 LECTURE NOTES, individual lectures or semester subscription. Office 30412 5, SPRING WEEKEND tickets on sale now for Skit Nite and Dance. Tickets are on sale at the Diag, Eng. Arch, and Union, Monday-Friday from noon to five. F190 SENIORS? Order your graduation an- nouncements now. On sale at the Student Activities Building, March 22-31 and April 11-13. Sales from 1-5 each day except March 25 from 9-12. Price is 12c each. F127 REAL ESTATE We have pictures and details on over 200 homes for sale in Ann Arbor. RBOR A SSOCIATES, REALTORS 303 S. Division NO 5-9114 I 0 * * * * . 40c I r 1201 South University ARABIA of Hinland has created many beautiful dinnerware { ^::.r} "" T:^~n.}:t}?;g ?nn} .+n: t~: f?}:.::rl"]{nFy?° r I II II I I 1 %EI N E 81OW W E W