1Y, OCTOBER 3, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE] Y, OCOBER ,1962THE MCHIG- - - V A( a1, ca u a a' 1 11 LAW SCHOOL: Cooper Studies Administrative Agencies For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786 from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 9:30'till 11:30 A.M. By GERALD STORCH Prof. Frank E. Cooper of the Law School is currently engaged in a survey of administrative agencies in the 50 states to dis- cover how closely these agencies adhere to "mod l" procedures. So far, he and his law student assistants have found that only between 15 and 20 states (includ- ing Michigan) posses legislation guaranteeing that "all individ- uals affected by decisions of the agencies be given a fair hearing" if they wish to question the rul- ings. These protections, plus provi- sions establishing actual judicial review for individuals protesting, for instance, an administrative decision to raise utility rates, are recommendations contained in a model law drafted some time ago -and then revised last year-by the Commissioners on Uniform State Law. To Study Cases Having already gathered rele- vant statutes dealing with admin- istrative agencies in each of the states; Prof. Cooper and his assistants are now busy collect- ing every state supreme court de- cision in the past 10 years deal- ing with these units. The latter task is a rather tedious undertaking, he says, as the indexing system for such cases is incompatible with the type of research in progress. After all the material is stud- ier, Prof. Cooper will write a book to be published sometime in 1964 describing "how the work of the agencies may be made more ef- fective" in relation to the model draft. Michigan Situation Viewing the situation in Mich- igan, he explains that a state law passed about 10 years ago closely follows the procedural recom- mendations of the commissioners. "But, in order to get the act passed, it was not made applicable to some of the most important regulatory agencies" - including t h e Workmen's Compensation Commission and the Public Ser- vice Commission, which oversees utilities, Prof. Cooper continued. There are provisions in the pro- posed state constitution for judi- cial review of agency decisions, however. And prospects for improvement are evident in other states, too, FOR RENT PERSONAL he contends. "There has been a burst of interest in this field dur- ing the past three or four years, with bar groups actively pressing for adoption of the 'model' provi- sions." He emphasizes that he is defi- nitely not soliciting complaints from individuals who harbor feel- ings of injustices from the state administrative commissions, but is merely conducting "a rather dry" examination of administra- tive codes and procedures. Unfortunately, a contrary im- pression seems to be held by sev- eral segments of the public, Prof. Cooper says, pointing out "seven or eight crank calls" he has re- ceived from aggrieved individuals complaining of some injury meted out by a state agency. His research project is spon- sored and financed by the Law School and the American Bar Foundation, which is part of the American Bar Association. ROOM for female student. NO 5-0393 after 5. C24 CAMPUS LOCATION-Two bedroom and den apartment, second floor, utilities furnished. $140. NO 3-4062. C34 FURNISHED APT. very close to campus, 3 rooms and private bath. NO 2-7274, 603 E. Ann. Rent: $110. C28 BLOCK FROM LAW QUAD Furnished apartment for one person or for couple, clean and spacious. $75 per month. NO 3-7268. C32 Apartments for Rent CARL D. MALCOLM, Jr., REALTOR Phone NO 3-0511, evenings: NO 5-9271 and NO 5-6634 C6 APARTMENTS FOR RENT-A limited number of two-bedroom furnished apartments available for November assignment to married students or faculty with two or more children. Apply at University Apartments Office, 2364 Bishop St., North Campus, or phone 662-3169 or 663-1511, Ext. 3569. C31 NEW STUDENT APARTMENTS 1015 Vaughn, New modern furniture and appliances. Phone 3-0511, evenings: NO 5-9271 and NO 5-6634. STUDENTS APARTMENTS, LIMITED Apartments Available On South Forest .. Packard .V.Vaughn ..E. Liberty CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BLIMPY BURGERS on sale Friday. F1 LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .70 .85 1.00 SPECIAL SIX-DAY RATE 3.48 4.20 4.95 Figure 5 average words to a line Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. Phone NO 2-4786 FOR SALE !I NO 3-0511, evenings: NO 5-9271 NO 5-6634. and C5 ACT NOW Only a very limited number of studio and one-bedroom apart- ments left. Bus transportation to campus and Ann Arbor business district. HURON TOWERS NO 3-0800, NO 5-9162 STUDENTS Do you want to live in a new, luxury two - bedroom, furnished apartment -- But do not have enough' roommates to carry the load-don't hesitate-call Apart- ments Ltd, NO 3-0511. Evenings NO, 5-9271, NO 5-6634. We will ar- range meetings for interested parties. Hurry-only four available. C27 ROOM AND BOARD SINGLE in private home. 900 Arbordale. 865-8188. E5 AM & FM RADIOS, wood cabinet, Jap- anese Manuf., brand new. $25. 662- 3729. B22 RALEIGH MAN'S BICYCLE, large size, in good condition and ready to use. Call NO 5-6680 after 5 p.m. B21 FOR SALE: Women's quality used clothing (plaid English woolen skirts) size 10-12. Call 663-2823 mealtimes. B6 $14,700-3 bedrooms, 2-car garage, full basement, landscaped corner lot. East Ann Arbor. NO 5-8087. B16 CHRISTIAN ENTERPRISES STORE 3650 CARPENTER ROAD PHONE-NO 8-9629 Open: Mon.,.Fri., Sat.-8 a.m.-9 p.m. Tue., Wed., Thur.--8 a.m.-6 p.m. Furnishings for home or apartment. Re-upholstered and refinished furni- ture. Hide-A-Beds $64.50 up Sofa Beds $37.50 up Platform Rockers $22.50 up Occasional Chairs 3.50 up ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES Refrigerators $29.50 up Electric ranges $27.50 up Gas ranges 15.00 up washing machines 17.50 up Television sets 27.50 up Radios 4.50 up Desks 4.50 up Dining Room sets 24.50 up Bedroom suites 42.50 up Miscellaneous articles of all kinds. Clothing for the entire family. One set of Corpus Juris Law books. C34 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Pair black woman's frames in blue case and blue Shaffer pen, cam- pus area. NO 2-0038. A17 LOST--Gold necklace with the name Merreylen on it. Please call 665-7711, Ext. 6207. A16 FOUND-Ladies watch near E. Engineer- ing. Found last week. Call Mary Ann at NO 3-1511, Ex. 705 to claim. A15 LOST - Aqua-Lung Regulator. Serial number 0001-87. Reward. Bruce Hauke, 10 Adams W. Quad. NO 2-4401. A8 BARGAIN CORNER ATTENTION ROTC Officers' Shoes Army-Navy Oxfords-$7.95 Socks 39c Shorts 69c Brasso 69c SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington BUSINESS SERVICES ENTERTAINERS WANTED: Contact the Bud-Mor Agency, 1103 S. University. Phone NO 2-6362. H2 PART TIME, one or two hours per day, work at home. NO 3-9777 between 6 and 8 p.m. J7 MANUSCRIPTS, TERM PAPERS typed, Multilith Offset for reproduction. Photo copy, mailings. Getzingers Bus- iness Service, 320 S. Huron. HU 2-0191. J8 THE HAIRIEST SHOP IN TOWN M-DEN BARBERS across from the Hill Auditorium Basement of Michigan Pharmacy J6 WASHTENAW CAFE German and American Cuisine We specialize in German Foods., Try Our Cold Beer and Liquor Student Specials Daily 211 N. Main J3 the Bud-Mor Agency featuring the finest music: Maximillian Doug Brownt Johnny Harverd Andy Anderson Clarence Byrd sick Tilkin Bell-Tones (Ron Bell) Art Bartner Men of Note Bill Curtin The Classics Now accepting bookings for fall. 1103 S. University, phone NO 2-6362. J4 B.B.: See you at the mailbox. J.R. F39 J.B.-How were your two dates to the football game? P.R.-in the form of T.F. & J.R. F2 DON'T FORGET - S.E.C. orientation program today. F45 VOTE GEORGE ROMNEY-WE NEED A CHANGE FOR THE BETTER. F40 J.R.-Yes, he's God. T.F. F4 CINDY-I still advocate twisting- perhaps with a few aspirin. You know who. F5 A FRIEND-I don't care what happens toDKip after what he did to NINA. L.D. F6 TO A CERTAIN somebody who really knows how to mix them. STOP. F7 SEE YOU at the Chi O Open-Open House. F8 WILL SWAP senior woman's apartment for sorority pin. Meet me at corner of S. University and Washtenaw. F31 BUT, T was sure I was going to the Flower Bowl. Duffy. F11 STILL INTERESTED in someone you were interested in last spring? Call the Student Locater (Ann Arbor Operator) for information for num- ber thereof until new Student Direc- tory is published. P.R. F3 AUSTIN DIAMOND CORP. - "Where marginal prices buy quality dia- monds," 1209 S. University, 663-7151. F43 PHIL! Pretense causes ulcers. Love cures them. Stop thinking. Start acting. Ann. F9 HELLER, Hyde, Murphey & Murhpey- Bet yout hought you'd never hear from me, I guess. Yea, rah, Peanut butter. See you under the Arbutus. Respectfully, Chris. Flo WHAT WILL happen to Kip? See "The Secret Storm" on Monday-This per- tains to T.F. and L.D. mainly. A friend. F41 WHAT DO you mean, I can't have 47 duplicates of this key made. Senior Girl. P12 M. GORDAN-Please contact me. Your roommate-fall, '61. F48 PIZZA KING 1308 South University Free, fast delivery, 3 sizes- 12-, 14-, & 16-inch. NO 5-9655 F11 NOW IS the time for all freshman to start studying for five-week exams- and for all others to begin thinking about studying in the first place. F49 WHICH sorority has Aphrodite for its patron goddess? An interested par- taker. F50 THE MICHIGANENSIAN IS YOUR ALL-AMERICAN YEARBOOK; USED CARS 1958 VESPA. Excellent condition. Re- cently overhauled. Bargain at $125. NO 5-6870. N9 1939 OLDS. Great shape, cheap. Call NO 5-9356 N19 1961 AUSTIN HEALEY Sprite. Good condition, best offer. Call 663-3127. N21 '58 TRIUMPH. Excellent condition, new Pirelli tires, engine overhauled. $1,095. NO 3-5446. N17 1951 MG-TD ROADSTER. Red, good condition, new engine. Call NO 3- 7541, Ext. 605. N22 1956 PLYMOUTH Station Wagon. Very good condition-automatic transmis- sion. Low mileage tires. Always kept up with care. $450. 663-9954. N21 '55 2-DR. CHEV. Good clean car, stand- ard trans. $325. HU 2-9425. TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED to NYC. Oct. 19th or 26th.+'668-7439. Gil BIKES and SCOOTERS MOTORCYCLES! 1958 B.S.A. 650cc Golden-Flash. 1957 Zundapp 200cc Challenger. Call 5-3355. Z16 1958 LAMBRETTA. Good transportation cheap. Call NO 3-3230 any night after 6. Z13 1960 HOREX Motorcycle 97cc. Mint con- dition. Ideal campus transportation. $250 or best offer. 665-7411. 801 Cath- erine. Z UNICYCLES provide prestige campus transporta- tion. See September 1'?Newsweek, page 65. Make yours from bicycle parts. Send $1.00 for 5-page illustrated plans to Unicycle, Box 252, Worthington, Ohio. Z15 A Bike is a Necessity Michigan's campus becomes Accessible with a BEAVER BIKE Save your feet and enjoy fall rides through the Arb. We Have EVERYTHING in bike accessories. Beaver Bike Shop 605 Church NO 5-6607 WANTED TO BUY 0 The Harriest Shop in Town M-DEN BARBERS across from the Hill Auditoriun Basement of Michigan Pharmacy J6 L J ENGINEERS: chofth-e-seSpecific a t In S Fit th uture of Your Career? The list below probably contains a number of the things you consider im- portant in selecting the job that will do the most for you. Many companies offer most of them, but to different degrees and in different ways. Check the list and then consider how Emerson Electric meets these specifications. You may decide that an Emerson job is worth investigating. SPECIFICATION EMERSON ELECTRIC OFFERS Good company growth Emerson is a medium-size company on the move. It has grown from a $40 million business to over $200 million in just eight years. Personal growth Because Emerson continues to grow at an accelerated rate, potential positions continue to open at all levels. And Emerson believes in promotion from within. Personal recognition Because Emerson is not a giant, engineers retain their individ- opportunies uality and identity. Projects are assignedto informal small teams. Your work will be recognized and rewarded. Challenging projects Emerson is involved in many aerospace, defense and commercial projects: Thermo-lag (heat shield for rockets and satellites), Space radar, Honest John, Infra-red reconnaisance systems, Lasers, aerospace ground support equipment, automatic programmers and evaluators, and adaptive control systems are some of the space and military projects. In the commercial area advanced research is being done in electric motors, lighting, heating, cooling and ventilating products. Emerson's living effects laboratory has achieved national recognition. Personal intiative This is encouraged at Emerson. Facilities are made available to encouragement .engineers with ideas. Emerson's sales staff sells whatever good ideas are developed by the engineering staff. At Emerson you follow your orgininated ideas through to finish. Top salary and henefts Too much to cover here, but Emerson ranks at the.top in both of these categories. Specific information available at interview. Solid company Though Emerson is strong in both aerospace and defense pro- diversification jects, the company is solidly based in diversified commercial and consumer products. Emerson is a leader in such products as lighting, heating, cooling and industrial electronics. Strong corporate Emerson was founded in 1890. It has a stature that age can bring. itality But it also has a youthful vitality, vigorous and aggressive-without rigid or restrictive operating procedures. Good educational Emerson has in-plant training courses as well as subsidized facilities graduate study at Washington and St. Louis Universities. Comfortable location Emerson is located in suburban St. Louis, offering easy access to many housing developments, shopping areas,'expressways and recreation..St. Louis itself offers top sports and cultural facilities, as well as a relatively low cost of living. ????? ?????? ?? There are other matters that are important to you as an individual -more information needed concerning the points touched on here. Be sure you get the full story on the outstanding potential for you in this fast-moving organization. EMERSON INVITES YOU TO TALK TO ITS REPRESENTATIVE: Ask your placementofice for location of interview. Ifu i n a rrane-..... ....... nr_.._ r 11 HELP WANi ED THIS IS a new opening; Female to prepare dinner for 5 teaching fellows. Salary $10 a week plus meals. Hours to be arranged. 665-7411. M18 WAITER needed 3 meals a day. Call NO 3-4238. H10 PART TIME SHOE SALESMAN. wanted. Experience preferred. Apply in person. Mast's Shoes, 619 E. Liberty. H17 STUDENT WIVES Exciting job with Sarah Coventry awaits you. Immediate income in year around work with high earn- ings. If you have transportation and three evenings available and are neat appearing you may phone NO 2-1908 for interview between 2-4 p.m. Ell MUSICAL MDSE, FOR SALE-4 String Tenor Guitar and Delveceio, Brazilian made guitar. Brand new. NO 5-6115. X7 A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington MISCELLANEOUS WILL EXCHANGE my 2-$4 tickets to "Sound of Music" for 2 like tickets to "Marriage of Figaro." Write F. Nott, 500 E. Fulton, Grand Rapids, Mich., before Saturday. M5 SCHOOL FOR Scandal-Lessons In or evasion. Try our low calorie rasp- berry jam, RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Ml NOTICE On March 5, 1962, the City Council of the City of Ann Arbor unanim- ously adopted the following resolu- tion: "Discrimination in housing in Ann Arbor on the basis of race, creed, color, or national origin is a violation of the public policy of the City." On September 10, 1962, the City Council directed that the statement of this City policy be publicized within the City. Any person who is aggrieved by actions contrary to the City's policy is hereby advised to contact the Human Relations Commission of the City of Ann Arbor. The telephone number of the Staff Assistant of that Commission is NO 2-6583, extension 53. BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL 11 LI i PLYMOUTH RESIDENT wants ride to and from Law School daily. Call GL 3-8121 evenings. G0 Drive Yourself . . . AND SAVE pickups, panels, stakes, MOVING VANS Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 59 Ecorse Road - Ypsilanti, Michigan New Shipment of BRASS- Just Arrived From India-Beautiful Gifts For All Occasions India Art Shop 330 Maynard (Across from Arcade) il , ON THE CAMPUS SI I