WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN DAVID AND GOLIATH: France Seeks Monaco Income Taxes I CLASSIFIEDS The Daily Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration' Building before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21 General Notices Library Hours During Thanksgiving Vacation: The Univ. Libraries will, be closed Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 22. Li- braries will also be closed Sat. and Sun., Nov. 24 and 25. The Gen. Lib. and the Undergrad Lib. will close Wed., Nov. 21 at 5 p.m., as will many pf the divisional libraries. The Gen. Lib. and the Undergrad Lib. will be open on Fri., Nov. 23 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Most divisional libraries will be open on short schedules Fri., Nov. 23. The Thanksgiving recess hours for each lib. will be posted on the lib. doors, Applications for Fellowships and Scholarships in the Grad. School for 1963-64 are now available. Competition closes Feb. 15, 1963. Applications and information may be obtained in the Grad School offices, Rackham Bldg., or in departmental offices. Renewal forms are available at the Grad School. Only students who intend to enroll in the Horace H. Rackham School of Grad Studies for 1963-64 may apply. Final Payment of Fal Semester Fees is due and payable on or before Nov. 26, 1962. (Continued on Page 8) U gREEt N95 Let's talk turkey ! There's real savings right now on COATS-SUITS-DRESSES. If you will be in town, shop early for a better selection. if you'll be away see our holiday specials as soon as you come back. By TOM HENSHAW Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer VADUZ - On the surface it would seem to be a frightful mis- match. In this corner, France, once a world champion, with an area of 213,000 square miles, a population of 46 million, an army of a mil- lion men, led by Gen. Charles de Gaulle, president, war immortal and one of the genuine folk heroes of the 20th Century. In the other corner, Monaco, area of 370 acres, population 24,- 000 (all but 2,000 of them foreign- ers), armed forces of 170 gen- darmes and 100 guardsmen, led by Cola Rainier Grimaldi, prince, landlord of a gambling hall and husband of a movie star. Economic Dispute But don't sell the Monegasque David short in its economic dis- pute with the French Goliath. Monaco and its equally tiny sis- ter principalities, Andorra, San Marino and Liechtenstein, have been backed into corners by ma- jor powers of Europe before and they've managed to survive for hundreds of years - 1,800 in the legendary case of San Marino. It's a tribute to small power dip- lomacy. Taken together, the four little independent countries would fit four times into the state of Rhode Island with two Districts of Co- lumbia left over. Monaco alone could easily get lost among the trees of New York City's 840-acre Central Park. National Upheaval Monaco, Andorra, San Marino and Liechtenstein are leftovers from the great nationalist up- heavals that forged the modern states of France, Italy, Germany and Spain out of a collection of bickering principalities, duchies and baronies. / Monaco, on the sunny shore of the Mediterranean, was founded in the year 1297 by a Genoese ad- venturer named Grimaldi, who disguised himself as a Franciscan monk to enter the fortress and throw open its doors to his fol- lowers. It's been in the Grimaldi family ever since. San Marino, completely sur- rounded by Italy, ascribes its ori- gin to St. Marinus, an early Christian stonecutter, who found refuge from persecution on the slopes of 2,700-foot Mount Ti- tano in the year 301. It claims to be the oldest and smallest (23 square miles) republic in the world. Red Rule The Sanmarinese, still huddled together in fierce independence on the slopes and summit of Mt. Ti- tano, were in the news recently when they overthrew the only elected Communist government in the Western world. The Reds had ruled San Marino for 12 years following World War II. THE PALACE of Prince and Princess Rainier ANDORRA '3- Tc : 1 Wi Z ,fa "eI/A \ r'.. r - . i f == LECTESTI + ." _.- . mi\.' L [LlV / L .t'. 7E(6WMee n V, leane&'eca ' ~rr1ena 4 e . C _O,. CA lyaple- . MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES i DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2.40 4.20 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 overage words to o line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. doily Phone NO 2-4786 MUSICAL MDSE. RADIOS, REPAIRS FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY on radios, phonos, tape recorders and TVs with this ad. Campus Radio & TV, 325 E. Hoover. X9 A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington FOR RENT NEED ROOMMATE: Two graduate students have large, sharp modern apt, close to campus. Many features-TV, washing machine. Reasonable. Call Paul at 5-7468., C28 PARKING SPACE for rent. East Liberty and South Forest locations. Apts. Limited, NO 3-0511 evenings and NO 5-9271. 011 APARTMENTS FORRENT CARL D. MALCOLM, Jr., REALTOR Phone NO 3-0511 evenings; NO 5-9271 and NO 5-6634. C7 STUDENTS LOST AND FOUND LOST: Lady's silver ring. Marshall's Drug Store. Sentimental value. Re- ward. Call 5-9675 after 6. A48s LOST - Pet Springer Spaniel, vicinity Hill & Washtenaw. Reward. Phone NO 2-8582. A47 PERSONAL S. QUADDIES-Remember: Don't Get Stuck With a Left-over Turkey! 32 GL70 . . . MZPG$1? spring weekend MASS MEETING and remember FOUR PURPLES DON'T FLY HEAVY so League Ballroom there Nov. 27, 7:30. ' F39 HAPPY THANKSGIVING-Only 30 more days until Christmas Vacation. F49 AUSTIN DIAMOND CORPORATION - Where marginal prices buy quality diamonds!" 1209 S. University. 663- 7151. F43 R.W.-HOPE YOU carry out your reso- lutions over the holiday. 300. PP HAVE SPRING, Will Swing Wire: Special Weekend Mass Meeting Nov. 27-7:30-League Ballroom, Ann Arbor. F40 Ow a/a c { .t ,4t, trc2c ./ 'IedZferranE s4/?I.IM4 AP Newsfeatures WASHINGTON, D.C. MONACO .SAN MARINO lIECHTENSTEIN ANDORRA 69 SQUARE MILES 370 ACRES 23 SQUARE MILES 61 SQUARE MILES 175 SQUARE MILES ', r-\-u Several apartments available in pus and Burns Park area. APARTMENTS, LIMITED NO 3-0511 Evenings NO 5-9271 cam-I ON' FOREST oft S. around the corner from Campus Theater OPEN ALL DAY Saturday ! also Monday Evening L * (Author of "I Was fTee"*aGetDwarf", "The Many COMMITTEES: AN AGONIZING RE-APPRAISAL To those of you who stay out of your student government because you believe the committee system is just an excuse for inaction, let me cite an example to prove that a committee, properly led and directed, can be a great force for good. Last week the Student Council met at the Duluth College of Veterinary Medicine and Belles Lettres to discuss purchasing a new doormat for the students union. It was, I assure you, a desperate problem because Sherwin K. Sigafoos, janitor of the students union, threatened flatly to quit unless a new doormat was installed immediately. "I'm sick and tired of mopping that dirty old floor," said Mr. Sigafoos, sobbing convulsively. (Mr. Sigafoos, once a jolly outgoing sort, has been crying almost steadily since the recent death of his pet wart hog who had been his constant companion for 22 years. Actually, Mr. Sigafoos is much better off without the wart hog, who tusked him viciously at least once a day, but a companionship of 22 years is, I suppose, not lightly relinquished. The college tried to give Mr. Sigafoos a new wart hog-a frisky little fellow with floppy ears and a waggly tail-but Mr. Sigafoos only turned his back and cried the harder.) i Liechtenstein, so small (61 square miles) that the Paris to Vienna Express passes through in 15 minutes without stopping, was' created by the Holy Roman Em- peror in 1719 as a gift for a fa- vorite prince. It became independ,. ent when the German Confedera- tion collapsed in 1866. Tucked away in the Alps be- tween Austria and Switzerland, it has no standing army. Back in 1866, it sent 80 soldiers to fight for Austria against Prussia. But the war lasted only seven weeks and was over before the valiant 80 reached the front. In disgust, Liechtenstein disbanded its army for good two years later. Southern Slopes Andorra, 175 square miles of mountain valleys on the southern slopes of the Pyrenees between France and Spain, traces its exis- tence as a state back to the Em- peror Charlemagne. Its national anthem in the Catalan language begins: "El Gran Carlemany mon pare" (Great Charlemagne my father), The government of Andorra is unique. It's ruled by co-princes - one the nearby Bishop of Urgel in Spain; the other the president of France, who inherited the mantle from the French Count of besides, the country's 12-man po- Foix through a long, involved lice force ignores it anyway. series of marriages and revolu- Working Force tions. Roughly half of the working The four little principalities force of Monaco is employed by exist at the sufferance of their the Societe Anonymes des Bains larger neighbors. But each is self- de Mer et du Cercle des Etrangers supporting. In fact, Andorra even a Monaco, which operates, the ca- manages to pay a nominal yearly sino, hotels and movie theaters. tribute of 960 francs to the presi- All four countries, but particu- dent of France and 460 pesetas to larly Monaco and Liechtenstein, the Bishop of Urgel. also provide convenient tax havensj Postage Stamps for foreign companies. They have Liechtenstein and San Marina no taxes on income or profits. each probably issue more postage Liechtenstein is the nominal busi- stamps per capita than any other ness headquarters for 5,000 cam- country in the world. They are panies who pay a 0.1 per cent tax' snapped up eagerly by collectors. A on paid-in capital. recent postage stamp catalog de- Economic Pressure votes 11.5 pages to Liechtenstein The tax haven problem is be- issues; only 7.5 to Norway. hind the current dispute between Recently, San Marino stumped Monaco and France, which is ex- every one but the philatelists by erting economic pressure to forceI issuing 500 lire (75 cent) air mail its tiny neighbor to start collect- stamp despite the fact that the ing income taxes from corpora-' country has no airport and no air- tions and individuals to discourage planes. The 20,000 stamp issue was the flight of French business to gone in a week and San Marino Monaco. was 10 million lire richer. Prince Rainier III may have to Andorrans, mostly shepherds compromise-but he'll never fully and farmers, have a lively sideline give in.' smuggling goods between Spain That's how Monaco, Andorra, and France. As near as . nyone can Liechtenstein and San Marino figure 'out, smuggling is perfectly have managed to survive all these legal under Andorran laws. And, years. ACT NOW Studios from $111.00 1-bedroom from $130.00 Bus transportation to campus and Anti Arbor business district. HURON TOWERS NO 3-0800, NO 5-9162 STUDENTS Do vou want to live in a new. luxury two - bedroom, furnished apartment - But do not have enough room~mates to carry the load-don't hesitate-call Apart- ments Ltd, NO 3-0511. Evenings NO 5-9271. We will arrangemet tings for interested parties. Hurry only four available. C27 WANTED TO RENT GARAGE WANTED Vicinity of Canterbury Rd., Ann Arbor Woods or John Allen School. Phone NO 5-9429 after 5 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS NYLON STOCKINGS & MOUSE TRAPS. SNACKS ON THE RUN, You name it, we have it at .. . RALPH'S MARKET PADLOCKS, NITE LITES, 709 Packard MI FOR SALE FOR SALE-1 Battered Screen demol- ished during hasty ESCAPE. Call the Fearsome 5. 5-3858. B6 FOR SALE-'57 Indian motorcycle, 700cc. Call NO 5-0266. B4 CHRISTIAN ENTERPRISES STORE 3650 CARPENTER ROAD PHONE--NO 8-9629 Tue., Wed., Thur.--8 a.m.-6 p.m. Open: Mon., Fri., Sat.--8 a.m.-9 p.m. Furnishings for home or apartment. Re-upholstered and refinished furni- ture. C451 LOST-One turkeyvicinty Fishbowl o Sat., at 1:30 a.m. Wt. 18 lbs. 3 o2 multi-colored, few feathers missi from tail. Reward offered. If caug feed choice corn and champagn Write Box 13, Daily. F WANT TO ESCAPE? Try art. Try Ge eration staff. We need you. For inf mation call John Herrick, editor, N 3-2273 or NO 2-3241. You too c speak for your generation. F GOLDIE - Don't tamper with soc chairmen. We've been in the busini too long. LHSC. F AN OPEN NOTE OF THANKS toa the kids who worked so hard on So Show's publicity committee. Gail and Jim. FJ BARB Did I ever get took to the cleans and I enjoyed it too. My roomma took me to Frank's Kleen King, 1 ,Packard, and showed me how easy was to dry clean all my skirts, swea ers, coats, etc. A full 10 lb. load1 just 20 minutes for $2. For furth information or if you have transp tation problems call NO 8-9468. Sue F BUY YOUR $5 MICHIGANENSIAN NOW! HELP WANTED WANTED-Qualified people to aid academic tutoring. Sign up at Uni student offices. H HELP WANTED -Two men and t women. Three evenings and Sati days. Average $58 weekly. Car at neatness, required. For Interview c NO 5-9197. Ask for Mr. Kelly. Betwe 12 noon-1 p.m. and 5 p.m.-6 pa Monday, Oct. 29. A TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED to Chicago for th girls for Thanksgiving vacation. C Ronni, 662-2011. G WANTED-RIDE to Detroit. Downto' and return, Mon.-Fri. or carpool. C 663-8100. C Drive Yourself AND SAVE pickups, panels, stakes, MOVING VANS Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 59 Ecorse Road Ypsilanti, Michigan USED CARS 1959 TRA-3. SHARP British Racing. Gre 2 tops, 22,000 miles. None finerw campus. Reasonable. Leave phone, at NO 8-8917. N '55 FORD FAIRLANE. Automatic tran 44,000 miles. No rust. $300. HU 3-59 '55 2-DR. CHEV. Good clean car, stan ard trans. $325. HU 2-9425. '58 4-dr. FORD automatic. Low milea reasonable. Phone 663-0211. N 1960 ALFA ROMEO-Super Spider, bl 17,000 mi,, $2195. Call NO 3-0115 aft 6 p.m. CADILLAC-1951 sedan very comfo able transportation at a reasonat price. Radio and heater. NO 3-72 BUSINESS SERVICES The Harriest Shop in Town M-DEN BARBERS across from the Hill Auditorium Basement of Michigan Pharmacy ng ht ne. '48 or- ,NO an '11 ial ess F41 all ph F42 ers ate 226. it in her or. P44 in on 329 Ma ur- tnd ,all en .M. 134 ree 330 wn all 325 en, on no. N14 ns., 973. nd- gg, 11, ue, fter N4 irt- bole 202. N10 50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW: First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a "Crazy Question." It's the easy new way for students to make loot. Study the examples below, then do your own. Send them, with your name, address, college and class, to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y., Winning entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub- mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a $25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! (Based on the hilarious book "The Question Mon.") RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis of, humor (up to CA), clarity and freshness (up to %) and appropriateness (up to 'J), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awarded in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants and must be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 awards- every month, October through April. Entries received during each month will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April 30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The American Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em- ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies and Reuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will be notified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations. Hide-A-Beds Sofa Beds Platform Rockers Occasional Chairs $64.50 $37.50 $22.50 3.50 ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES I origyjurria ki bkzadrielJer But I digress. The Student Council met, discussed the door- mat for eight or ten hours, and then referred it to a committee. There were some who scoffed then and said nothing would ever be heard of the doormat again, but they reckoned without Invictus Millstone. Invictus Millstone, chairman of the doormat committee, was a man of action-lithe and lean and keen and, naturally, a smoker of Marlboro Cigarettes. Why do I say "naturally"? Because, dear friends, active men and women don't have time to brood and bumble about their cigarettes. They need to be certain. They must have perfect confidence that each time they light up they will get the same gratifying flavor, the same Selectrate filter, the same soft soft-pack, the same flip top flip-top box. In brief, dear friends, they need to be sure it's Marlboro-for if ever a smoke was true and trusty, it's Marlboro. Get some soon. Get matches too, because true and trusty though Marlboros are, your pleasure will be somewhat limited unless you light them. Well sir, Invictus Millstone chaired his doormat committee with such vigor and dispatch that when the Student Council met only one week later, he was able to rise and deliver the following recommendations: 1. That the college build new schools of botany, hydraulie engineering, tropical medicine, Indo-Germanic languages, and millinery. 2. That the college drop football, put a roof on the stadium. and turn it into a low-cost housing project fo- married students. 3. That the college raise faculty salaries by $5000 per year .. ..................-..-....----- ---- ----------------------- THE ANSWER: I THE ANSWER: I THE ANSWER: CHIN 'THE ASIT CHtMECKERS IMUECAS i aewpewadns Suo isulseonotu onpoid luoH a ul pug o01 lZdxS nodLpInoM I sapGads s,Jesae0 snlnr i -sseSw oi sue!pul ueopewy Al.e3 pqe slpalo; o edAl leq :NOILS3nb 3H1 I jo 1soW 40IM o4 :NOIIS3nb 3H1 I -uG uoljuAul! leqt :NOllS3f6 3H1 ..-- I-------------------------------'"----"----------"-"-"-"-" " THE ANSWER: THE ANSWER: THE ANSWER:1 ':3-23 inute 'SEVEN LEAGUE I 8 2r-3 IvMen1Ro f saleo olsld -sueljndlslew pos iZelund e o eSAe snopuew I Ie l s eweu noA ue5 :NOl1S nb 3H1. I-ep nog plnoM MOH :NOl1S3n 3H1 1- o eq Pifnom le4M :NOIS3A? 3H1 I L---------------------------------------------------------- -- ..- - - . THE ANSWER IS: Refrigerators Electric ranges Gas ranges washing machines Television sets Radios Desks Dining Room sets Bedroom suites $29.50 $27.50 15.00 17.50 27.50 4.50 4.50 24.50 42.50 up' up up up up up up up up up up up up Miscellaneous articles of all kinds. Clothing for the entire family. One set of Corpus Juris Law books. C34 BARGAIN CORNER ATTENTION ROTC Officers' Shoes Army-Navy Oxfords-$7.95 Socks 39c Shorts 69c Brasso 69c SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington FOR THE FINEST SELECTION of party favors and unique gifts contact Bud- Mor Agency, 1103 S. University, NO 2-6362. J4 MANUSCRIPTS, TERM PAPERS typed, Multilith Offset for reproduction, Photo. copy, mailings. Gretzinger's Business Service, 320 S. Huron. HU 2-0191. J8 CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE for volume Renault-Peugeot dealer is now offer- ing free demonstration of new and used tow-priced imports. Call Mr. Bode at NO 2-5614 or 2-5615 any day after noon for appointment. J18 ..f. . ...n" ::,!"}}.......** . .. *. d......w.": . "... ..... c:v:}:..* i " ,:: :.... ......: ",n';.v:;:::::-: " r:.".;,r > ;i~~~.,.}ยข 2 Yi":: ;}i:.::: "{ -::.. ..,.... .: aii},t: .yii- icR} A Very Happy ThanksqiCvitnq to . 2 LUICKY ORI5$ -L M-'-T;-A - AUlk-