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March 19, 1960 - Image 5

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The Michigan Daily, 1960-03-19

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE

Regents Accept Scholarship
Gifts, Research Grants

WELCOME SUOMALAINEN-Karl Suomalainen, who will visit the University this week, drew this
cartoon depicting his departure from Helsinki. The Finnish politicians include President Kekkonen
and Premier Sukselainen.

MEN'S HOUSING.
Specialzed
By KENNETH McELDOWNEY
Experiments with graduate and
transfer student houses have not
been completely successful, John
Hale, assistant dean of men and
director of residence halls said
yesterday.
He commented that many prob-
lems have been caused by physical
limitations as well as clashing of
Interests. The physical limitations
have been a large drawback to the!
success of the graduate house,!
Tyler of East Quadrangle.
As it was not designed for gradu-
ate students there are not enough
singles to accommodate those who
want them.
Another drawback to the gradu-
ate house has been the limitations
imposed by inflexible meal sched-
ules and other regulations de-
signed mainly for the benefit of
undergraduates. With their late
classes and irregular schedules the
graduate students find that they
must miss many meals, Hale said.
As the house is surrounded by
the other houses of East Quad-
rangle it is difficult to give the
graduate students special privi-
leges not given to the undergradu-
ates in the other houses.
Other problems have arisen in
Prescott house also of East Quad.
As this house is composed of both
transfer and graduate students
there is a conflict in interests. The
transfer students for the most!
part, he said, have the same in-
terest in group activities and
pranks as freshmen and sopho-
mores. This conflicts with the gen-
eral seriousness of the graduate
students.
Alumni Board
Appoints Two
Two new members have been
elected to serve three-year terms
on the board of directors of the
University Alumni Association.
They are Arthur B. McWood, of
Bloomfield Hills and Clarence B.
Zewadski, of Detroit,

Finnish Cartoonist Set
For Journalism Lecture

Gifts and grants totalling $152,-
762 were accepted by the Regents
yesterday.
From the Alfred P. Sloan Foun-
dation, Inc., the Regents accepted
$27,500 representing the first half
of a grant for science teaching
fellowships.
The Regents accepted 120 shares
of Lake Shore National Bank
Stock from Chesser M. Campbell,
president of the Tribune Company
of Chicago. Sale of 100 shares of
stock has produced $25,128 which
has been used to establish the
Chester M. Campbell Fund. The
use to be made of this fund will
be determined later. Proceeds from
the sale of the remaining 20 shares
will go to the Phoenix Atomic Re-
search Program.
Finance Seminar
The Ford Foundation has made
a grant of $18,000 for a summer
seminar on problems of stability
and growth in the national income
for teachers of economics in liberal
arts colleges. The seminar will be
under the direction of Prof. Gard-
ner Ackley, chairman of the eco-
nomics department.
Rockefeller Foundation has
made two grants totalling $18,000.
One is for up to $8,000 to permit
Prof. Morris Janowitz to study the
relationship between the problems
of political philosophy and so-
ciological research. There also was
a grant of $10,000 for the Phoenix
Memorial Laboratory's research on
the immunizing effeft of irradi-
ated larval parasites, with par-
ticular reference to schistosomes.
Three different grants totalling
$10,050 were accepted from Con-
sumers Power Company of Jack-
son, with one of $7,500 to provide
three fellowships of $2,500 each in
engineering. A grant of $2,250 is
for three engineering scholarships
of $750 each and a $300 grant is
for the company's freshman schol-
arship,
Ireland Gets Grant
From Research Corporation of
New York the Regents accepted
$7,500 as the second of three an-
nual grants for unrestricted use by
Prof. Robert E. Ireland of the
chemistry department. These
grants are in "extraordinary recog-
nition" of Prof, Ireland's potential.!
The Regents accepted $6,677.85
for use by the University Cancer
Research Institute with $6,177.85{
coming from The American Can-
cer Society, Michigan Division, and

$500 from the Muskegon County
Unit of the society.
Wolverine Tube Division of Calu-
met & Hecla, Inc. has given $5,000
to continue support for a fellow-
ship which was established in
1945. The fellowship is for research
on essential information on finned
tubing.
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sloan of
Detroit have given $5,000 repre-
senting the final payment for a
research project on "The Motiva-
tion to Get Well in Rheumatoid
Arthritis."
Two grants amounting to $3,300
were accepted from Upjohn Com-
pany with one of $3,000 to estab-
lish a fund for research in arthri-
tis under the direction of Dr. Saul
Roseman and one of $300 to es-
tablish a fund for research in
obstetrics and gynecology under
the direction of Dr. Gregory Du-
boff.
Sinclair Research Laboratories,
Inc., Harvey, Ill., has made a grant
of $2,500 for a fellowship in chemi-
cal engineering.
Engineering Fellowship
National Electronics Conference,
Inc., Chicago, has given $2,500 for
a fellowship in electrical engineer-
ing. From Minnesota Mining &
Manufacturing Company the Re-
gents accepted $2,500 for a fellow-
ship in chemistry.
Research in analgesic pharma-
cology will be possible with a
grant of $2,076 received from Ster-
ling-Winthrop Research Institute
of Rensselaer, N.Y.
Aurora Gasoline Company of
Detroit has given $1,600 for two
additional scholarships for the
1959-60 year.
William J. Brandstrom, Fre-
mont, has given $1,500 to establish
the William J. Brandstrom Prize.
This will be used for awards to
honor the academic excellence of
the top seven per cent of the fresh-
men class at the University.
The Regents accepted a total of
$1,500 to establish the Industrial
Engineering Computer Fund. Do-
no'rs, who made their gifts through
the University's Development
Council, were Whirlpool Founda-
tion $1,000; and Modine Manufac-
turing Company $500. The fund
will be used to provide a computer
for the industrial engineering de-
partment in the engineering col-
lege.

BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING: Theses, term papers, reason-
able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590.
Jil
Are you lost in the crowd?
Is that your trouble buble?
Be an Individualist and be out of iti
Join the other outs at Ralph's.
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard NO 2-3175
(Just two doors from the Blue Front)
J39
REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth hols
rewoven. Let us save your clothes.
Weave-Bac Shop, 224 Nickels Arcade,
NO 2-4647. J1
Reconditioned Vacuum Cleaners
$15.00 and up
J. LEABU SALES AND SERVICE
322 E. Liberty NO 3-3604
J59
ONE-DAY SERVICE
AT SANFORDS
Shoe Repairing
Hat Cleaning
Tailoring
Pressing
Shoe Shining
119 East Ann Street
Open 'Ti1 8 P.M. -
Also Sundays & Holidays
(Opposite court house since 1927)
NO 8-6966
J2
Special Offers,
March 1960
Atlantic-8 mos. ..................$3.00
Sat. Eve. Post--37 wks. ........ $2.97
Esquire-~8 mos.......... ." 2.
Holiday-15 mos.......... .$3.75
New Republic-9 mos..............$3.00
New Yorker- mos............... $3.00
Time, Life, Sports Illus., and News-
week less than $.09 per copy.
STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY
Call NO 2-3061
J31
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
RECORD SALE ON
NAME BRAND LABELS
QUALITY
DIAMOND NEEDLES
MUSIC CENTER

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
SPECIAL
TEN-DAY
LINES ONE-DAY RATE
2 .80 .39
3 .96 .A7
4 1.12 54
Figure 5 overage 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

1

Kari Soumalainen, internation-
ally-known Finnish cartoonist, will
be a guest lecturer at the Univer-
sity next week.
Soumalainen will give an official
University lecture at 4 p.m. Tues-
day under the sponsorship of the
journalism department. He will
also participate in several seminars
and classes and appear on a Uni-
versity television program.
The invitation to Soumalainen
to visit Michigan was extended by
President Harlan Hatcher during
his visit to Finland last spring.
Soumalainen iscbest known for
his cartoon which enraged Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev and
created an international incident.
His cartoon showed the Soviet
leader on a Volga River barge be-
ing pulled by Russian satellite
slaves. On the bank stood Presi-
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower and
Prime Minister Harold Mac Millan
to whom Khrushchev was saying,
"tut tut you capitalists, enslaving
all those countries."
Khrushchev complained bitterly
to President Kekkonen of Finland
who made a special radio broad-
cast to blame the Finnish press
in general and particularly car-
Lambda Kappa Sigma, the pro-
fessional pharmacy sorority, will
initiate seven new members to-
morrow.
The new members are Anne
Ehnis, '63, Sandra Geisler, '62,
Roberta Hoffman, '63, Virginia
Lafkowfky, '63, Gail Pollack, '63,
Judith Swenson, '63, and Linda
Zarlengo, '63.
, * * '
Sigma Alpha Mu is giving an
Untouchable Party tonight. Mem-
bers and their dates will dance to
the Kingsmen's music.
* a a
Eleven engineering students were
recently elected to Alpha Pi Mu,
National Industrial Engineering
Honorary. The new members are:
Bruce J. Baldwin, '62; Stanley L.
Bilsky, '61; Allen B. Dickerson,
'61; Charles R. Lakins, '61; Perry
L. Dulong, '61; Robert A. Erick-
son, '61.

toonists for endangering Finnish-
Soviet relations.
The following day Finns chuck-
led at Soumalainen's reply: a car-
toon which showed him drawing
a bandy-legged peace dove while
Kekkonen's eyes glowered from a
picture on the wall over which a
slogan read, "Big Brother is watch-
ing you."
Regarded as one of Europe's top
cartoonists, Soumalainen draws for
the independent Finnish newspa-
per, "The Helsinki Sanomat." Last
year he was awarded a special
scroll by the National Cartoonists
Society of the United States for
"courage in exposing Communist
deceit while working in the shadow
of the Kremlin."
During his stay in the United
States, observing American life
and politics, the controversial car-
toonist will visit the University's
Dearborn Center, the Detroit area,
the University of Toledo, where he
will address the student body and
participate in classes, and possibly
the Finnish community in the up-4
per peninsula.!

*USIflErS

I

I
I

300 S, Thayer St.

NO 2-2500
X39

GRINNELL'S
Grinnell Special RCA Stereo Records
reg. $4.98 on sale at $2.79
reg. $5.98 on sale at $3.29
Grinnell 12 base Electric Chord Organ
reg. $99.50 on sale at $69.50
Magnavox Stereo Phono-Console
reg. $199.50 on sale at $150.00
(walnut & oak slightly higher)
Grinnell Marh of Progress Special-
Grinnell ClaYton Piano on sale for
$495.00

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

ALTERATIONS
DRESS MAKING, Ladies' Tailoring, Al-
terations. Call NO 2-3481, day or eve-
ning. P
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-Yellow gold LeCoultre watch.
Vicinity of Undergrad Library. Call
NO 5-7314. Reward. A25
FOR SALE
21" RCA TV FOR SALE-in perfect
condition. Must sacrifice--$75. Call
NO 2-2350. B48
WRIST WATCH - must sacrifice my
beautiful Patek world's finest watch
-$195, cost $500. Call NO 2-4431.
ext. 109. / B38
BRAND NEW MOTOR BIKE stillmIn
crate. Call Bob Seaye, 2-4589 be-
tween 5-6 p.m. B39
1954 CHEVROLET 2-door, Terrific deal.
Call NO 8-7341. B36
CAPEHART - 3 speed mohagany hi-fi.
Like new. With stand and $100 worth
of records. Best offer. NO 3-1741.
B35
LIFE
Student-faculty price
21 weeks.................$1.91
1 year .....................$4.00
(Reg. price...$5.95 for 1 year)
Student Periodical Agency
NO 2-3061
B27
STUDENTS-I will give you a 25% dis-
count on a name brand portable type-
writer, backed by Ann Arbor's most
reputable office supply company. For
demonstration, call Ralph Frederick,
3-3839, 5-9 evenings. B44
FOR RENT
LARGE ROOM, double or single. Linens
and cleaned weekly. NO 2-8718. C75
LARGE ROOM, single or double. Linens
and cleaned weekly. NO 2-8718.
C74
ACTUALLY on campus, clean 5 rooms
furnished. NO 3-5947. C20
CAMPUS ROOMS for men, reasonable.
Linens furnished. NO 3-4747. C17
ONE BLOCK FROM CAMPUS-Modern
apartment, 514 S. Forest. Also room.
NO 2-1443. C25
LARGE ROOM, single $8 per week. HU
2-4959, 5643 Geddes Road. C35
GIRL WANTED to share spacious apart-
ment close to campus next semester.
Call NO 5-7616 after 5 p.m. C67
DO YOU HAVE boarders moving out-
Rooms for rent? Apartments for rent?
Do you want a cheap, convenient,
widely read source to publish this in-
formation??????????? then - try the
MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED
NO 2-4786
C42
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: 4 riders to Florida. Leaving
Fri., March 25th. Call NO 3-1669.
G41
LEAVING for Ft. Lauderdale the 25th,
coming back the 3rd, wants 2 riders.
NO 3-9468. 042
4 GIRLS NEED RIDE to Fort Lauder-
dale or vicinity Friday, March 25.
Call NO 3-6325 after 5 P.M. 040
WANTED: Ride to Rochester, Minn. Can
leave any time after noon T urs.,
March 24. Will share expenses. John
Hollenbeck, NO 3-9894. G39
RIDE WANTED to OKLAHOMA CITY
during Spring vacation - will share
expenses. Call NO 5-2585 after 7 P.M.
038
DRIVER NEEDED - To drive Hillman
auto from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. to Ann
Arbor within next thirty days. Gas,
oil paid. Call or write Mrs. Courtney
Draz, 2772 N.E. 37th Drive, Ft. Lauder-
dale. LOgan 6-1225. 037
SORRY, I didn't help you today, but
if you need a ride home, to Florida,
Oregon, Tennessee, or even New York
-just let people know through the
Classified ads. Call NO 2-4786 and let
us help you. 0G30

601 Packard

NO S-9429

BIKES and SCOOTERS

MOVE IN
FAST CIRCLES?
Get a wheel !

BARGAIN CORNER
ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks
39c; shorts 69c; military supplies.
Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington, W1
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly service is our business.
Atlas tires. batteries and accessor-
ies. Warranted & guaranteed. See
us for- the best price on new &
used tires. Road service-mechanic
on duty.
"You expect more from Standard
and you get it" "
1220 S. University at Forest
NO 8-9168
,1
. WHITE'S AUTO SHOP ,
Bumping and Painting
2007 South State NO 2-3350
82
SMITH AUTO UPHOLSTERING
Auto and Furniture
Refinished - Reupholstered _
Convertible Tops
NO 3-8644
YAHR'S MOTOR SALES
Bumping and Painting
Used Cars Bought and Sold
NO 3-4510
Both at 507 S. Ashley
Protect your car i I
"Fall Changeover
Antifreeze
. Winter Lubrication
Complete Tune-up Service Available
GOLDEN'S
SERVICE STATION

323 S. Main

NO 2-5667
X38

(Continued from Page 4)
PERSONNEL REQUESTS
Navy Mgt. Office, Navy Dept., Wash-
ington, D.C. has 2 openings for Mathe-
maticians. Must meet the qualification
standards in Civil Service Handbook
X-118 and should have technical compe-
tence equivalent to a Ph.D. in Math.,
Math. Econ.. or Math. Stat. March 23 is
the final date for acceptance of ap-
plications.
Detroit Civil Service has March 1st
list of continuing examinations now
on file with the Bureau.
Blackhawk Mfg. Co., Milwaukee, Wis.,
needs an ambitious young man in their
Central Financial Dept. to have the
responsibility for maintaining acctg,
records and preparing statements for
3 smaller subsidiary companies. Should
have outstanding top mgt. potential,
superior academic record and good un-
derstanding of accounting fundamen-
tals. A recent grad. or member of the
June class is desired and an MBA could
be useful.
Pennwalt Chemical Corp., Wyandotte,
Mich., has an opeping for a young
Mech. Engineer in the Maintenance
Engrg. Section of their Engrg. Dept.
New graduate to one with about 3 yrs.
of post-B.S. experience.
Edward Wren Store, part of the Allied
Stores Corp.. Springfield, Ohio, has an
Executive Training Program for New
or Recent Grads. Men and women with
BA in Bus. Admin. or Liberal Arts.
Chula Vista City School Dist., Chula
Vista, Calif., has need of a Director of
Placement Services.
WCAR, Detroit, Mich., needs a secre-
tary for Asst. to the Promotion Direc-
tor. Woman with BA and preferably
typing and shorthand.
Chrysler Corp., Detroit, has vacancy
for a Chemist with Specialty in Ad-
hesives/and/or Sealers. Man with MA
or PhD.
Whirlpool Corp., Evansville, Ind., has
need of an Editor of Publications, to be
responsible for house organ, plant bul-
letins, internal public relations. Man
with BA in Journalism, Bus. Ad., etc.
Requires 1-3 yrs. experience. Position
open in Personnel in Clyde, Ohio for
Man with BBA or MBA and training
in Personnel Admin. Requires 2-3 yrs.
experience.
W. R. Grace & Co., Dewey and Almy
Chemical Div., Cambridge, Mass., has
listing of vacancies now on file with
the Bureau. All levels and branches of
Chemistry, openings for Engrgs. and
for Accounting Liaison.
.Dept, of Administration, State ofnWis-
consin, Madison, has position open for
Asst. Chief, Div. of Architecture. Gradu-
ate of an accredited arch. school and 6
yrs. of responsibe administrative exper-
ience in the field of arch., Including
Io
Gibbs girls get top jobs
I 2
3&

responsibility for directing major archi-
tectural projects; Registration as or
eligibility to registration as Wisconsin
Architect.
Frick Co., Waynesboro, Penna., Is
increasing its sale-Engrg. forces, its
Home Office Engrg. Dept. and its Home
Office Sales Dept. and is interested in
hearing from any Mechanical Engra.
who will graduate in June '60, or Janu-
ary and June '61, who are interested in
entering the field of industrial refriger-
ation.
Weston Instruments, Div. of Day-
strom, Inc., offices in Newark, N.Y., has
openings for several recent college
graduates in Elec. Engrg. Call Bureau
for the complete details.
For further information concerning
any of the above positions, contact the
Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin.,
Ext. 3371.
INTERVIEWS
The following companies will inter-
view at the Engineering Placement,
12811 W. Engrg. Bldg.
Mar. 23 (A.M.) Blaw-Knox Company,
Pittsburgh, Pa., New York, Ohio, In-
diana, W. Va., Ill., Minnesota. BS-MS:
ChE, CE, EE, IE, ME & Met. MS: Con-
struction. Feb., June & Aug. gradu-
ates. Must be male U.S. citizen.
Mar. 23 (P.M.) Canadian Industries
Limited, Central Research Lab., Mc-
Masterville, Quebec. MS-PhD: ME PhD:
ChE, EE, All Phases of Chem., & Phy-
sics. Men only.
Mar. 23 The Chemstrand Corpora-
tion, Decatur, Ala.; Pensacola, Fla.;
Greenwood, S. C.; Raleigh, N.C. BS-MS:
ChE & ME. All Degrees: Analytical, Org.,
& Phys. Chem. & Physics. Feb., June &
Aug. graduates. Summer Employment:
Do not sign schedule before Mar. 23.
Permanent applicants have priority.
Must be male U.S. citizen.
Mar. 23 Chris-Craft Corporation, Al-
gonac or Holland, Mich. BS: IE & NA
& Marine. Feb., June & Aug. gradu-
ates. Men only.
Mar. 23 Fansteel Metallurgical Corp.,
North Chicago, Illinois. All Degrees:
ChE & Met., Inorg., Phys. Chem. &
Psysics. 13S-MS EE. BS: E Physics, IE
& ME. June & Aug. graduates. Sum-
mer Employment. U.S. citizenship re-
quired.
Mar. 23 Shawinigan Resins Corp.
Springfield, Mass. & Trenton, Michigan.

BS-MS: ChE & ME. BS: EE. MS: In-
strumentation. June & Aug. graduates.
Must be male U.S. citizen.
Mar. 23 United Aircraft Corporation,
Research Laboratories, E. Hartford,
Conn. Primarily for All Degrees: Math,
Also: All Degrees: AE, EE, ME & Met.
MS-PhDi ChE, IE, & EM, All phases of
Chem & Physics. MS: Mat'ls. & Instru-
mentation. BS: E Math, E Physics.
Those who did not interview on Febru-
ary 29. Both men & women.
Mar. 22 (P.M.) & 23 (all day) Union
Carbide Corporation, National Carbon,
Cleveland & Fostoria, Ohio; Niagara
Falls, New York; Clarksburg, W. Va.;
Columbia, Tenn. BS-MS: ChE, EE,
Chem & Physics. BS: EM, E Physics,
ME & Met. MS: Nuclear. June gradu-
ates. Summer Employment: Please sign
Special schedule for Summer Group.
Meeting to be held at 4:30 on Mar. 23
in Room 144, W. Engrg. P.S. citizenship
required.
Mar. 23 U.S. Coast Guard Headquar-
ters. Washington, Boston, St. Louis,
New York, Norfolk, Miami. New Orleans,
Cleveland, Long Beach, San Francisco,
Seattle, Hawaii, Alaska. BS-MS: CE,
EE, ME & Architecture. All Degrees: NA
& Marine. MS: Construction. MS-PhD:
Phys. Chem. (optics only). June & Aug.
graduates. Summer Employment: Please
do not sign schedule before Mar. 22.
Greatest need for NA & Marine Engrs.
Permanent applicants have priority.
U.S. citizenship required.
Mar. 23 Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
Pittsburgh, Pa. & Baltimore, Maryland
areas. PhD: E & Physics. June & Aug.
graduates. Summer Employment: Ap-
plications should be sent to company.
Men & women.
Student Part-Time
Employment
The following part-time jobs are
avail ble to students. Applications for
these jobs can be made in the Non-
Academic Personnel Office, Room 1020
Administration Building, during the
following hours: Monday through Fri-
day, 1:30 p.m. to 4:45 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring stu-
dents for part-time work should con-
tact Jim Stempson, Student Inter-
viewer at Normandy 3-1511, extension
2939.
Male
4 Meal jobs.
3 Single rooms in exchange for yard
and housework.
1 Desk clerk (mostly weekends).
2 Telephone callers (make phone calls
from own home).
1 Grad student (Zoology, Biology ma-
jor, injecting monkeys weekends
only).
1 Electronic Technician (20 hrs, per
week).

j PIANOS-ORGANS NEW & USED
Ann Arbor Piano & Organ Co.
213 E. Washington NO 3-3109
X1
Service on All
Radios, T.V.'s and Hi-Fi's
All Work Guaranteed
STOFFLET'S RADIO AND TV SERVICE
207 E. Ann NO 8-8116
X22
A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington NO 2-1834
X14
FM
IN YOUR CAR
convert your present radio
to FM for only $79.95.
Hi Fi Studio
1319 South University
X41
ORGANS and PIANOS by WURLIT-
ZER, EVERETT, & THOMAS. Mak-
ers, restorers, and dealers of rare
violins and bows. Also GUITARS and
BRASS INSTRUMENTS.
Sales --Service - Rentals-- Lessons
MADDY MUSIC
209 R. Liberty. NO 3-3395
X40
WANTED TO RENT
AWAY NEXT YEAR? Faculty couple
will sublet your 4 or 5 room apart-
ment Sept. 1960 to June 1961. Cam-
pusarea only. Local references. NO 2-
4988. L7

Beaver's Bike and Hardware
605 Church NO 5-6607
Z1S
PERSONAL
I FELT, I sought, I wondered, concern
gripped my being and I knew not
what to do.
Come to a WORSHIP SERVICE
Douglas Chapel, Congregational Church
12 noon, Sunday, March 20
749
P.O.P. DAY -- Phi Sigma, Sigma
March 20, 1960 - 7:30-10:30 P.M.
F50
CAMPUS CLOSEUPS.. .
DO YOU KNOW, BUT
HOW COULD YOU NOT KNOW..
Burt Tower ..................3-1511
Barbara Gym ................3-1511
F46
MICHIGRAS is not only, marvelous, in-
teresting, charming, happy, inimit-
able, gay, risque, agreeable and suc-
cessful, but it's also fun for everyone
to participate in1!! Try it and see.
P43
WHY COME DEPARTMENT:
Only at Michigan .. do teachers
satisfy their hidden aggression by
giving midterm exams the day a va-
cation begins or the day returning?
USED CARS
1957 ISETTA 300 convertible, $450. NO
3-6941, after 6 p.m. N12
FOR SALE
We specialize in good used cars from
$100 up. GENE'S AUTO SALES at
544 Detroit Street. NO 3-8141. N3
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. FF99
FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC it's Johnny
Harberd - Bob Elliot - Boll Weevils -
Andy Anderson - Dick Tilkln -_ Al
Blaser - Kingsmen - Ray Louis'-
Larry Kass plus many others. Phone
THE BUDrMOR AGENCY, NO, 2-6362.
FF10t0
EUROPEAN TOURS, '60. 45 days, 9
countries including Oberammergau
Passion Play & Olympics, if desired.
All for $705. For details write West-
ropa, Box 2053, Ann Arbor. FF1

-the antithesis
of perspicacity. Right?

NMDoze could save your life.
Worth knowing? Right!

Too often, driving a car is like reading a textbook. It can make you
drowsy no matter how much sleep you get. But safe NoDoz fights this
kind of "hypnosis." Safe NoDoz alerts you with
caffeine-the same refreshing stimulant in
coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming ;
NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable.
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study, and work-keep NoDoz handy.
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. eeser+eeeeees e eseMsesesa seeee e. eeeseees"e,
* a
.. 7 A CCEN T EST
FRANCAIS
..
.
. AIR FRANCE 4V/
.ike to think of yourself as a child of the sun?
"'' _ ~Are swimming and water skiing your idea of fun?;

Organization
Notices

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COMING TO CHICAGO
FOR THE WEEKEND?
Students (men or women), Couples,
" Families, Groups on Tour.
- K "STAY AT THE YMCA HOTEL
"ry* At the edge of the Loop
aAccommodotio.s for 2,000

-i

A

,

Phone NO 24786

E'

La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, Mar.
21, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. Cafe y conversa-
cion.F
* C *
Mich. Christian Fellowship, Christ
Revealed in the New Testament by Has-
kell Stone, Mar. 20, 4 p.m., Lane Hall,

1
2'
2'

Female
Typist (full-time for. 3-4 weeks).
Typists (20 hrs. per week).
Telephone callers (make phone calls
from own home).

for Michigan Daily

* Rates: $2.50 and up
" For Reservations, write Dept. "R", 126 Sooth Wabash Ave., Chicago 5, it.

IF

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Summer Opportunity ... for students from every part of
America -from many parts of
the world--to meet, study, play
and grow together in deeper
understanding of themselves,
their country, their times ..,. to
share a unique adventure in

B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION

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