TUESDAY, APRIL 19,1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Ci VI LI i 1 DAILY OFFICIAL Bt ^: ".};r": fv;:;:.;";r .is... A};:;;::;r; ;4.inl.: .r"C;;r "FrS (Continued from Page 4) SAFETY EXPERT-Paul Jones, public information director for the National Safety Council, discussed accident statistics and advised precaution in an address yesterday presented by the Journalism department. Jones Evaluates Reasons Behind Traffic Accidents the Madelon Pound house (basement) 1024 Hill Street. Open Thursday morn- ings each week-9:30-11:00 a.m. Top- coats and sweaters for men and wom- en. Infants equipment and clothing and children's clothing. These are available for all Foreign Students and Families needing the above items. Agenda Student Government Council,, April 20, 1960, 7:30 p.m., Council Room, Constituents' Time 9:00. Minutes of previous meeting. Agenda. Officer Reports: President: Letters, Prospectus, Addition to SAB (Dr. Bing- ley). Exec. Vice-President: Appoint- ments: Interviewing and Nominating NSA Regional Executive Committee, An- nouncement of Appointments. Admin. Vice-President: Report. Treasurer. Special Business: Non-Discrimination Discussion (1% hours). Debate and vote on Amendments. Old Business: Standing Committees: Student Activ- ities Committee: Recognition, Indian Chemical and Metallurgical Engineers Association: Calendaring and Approv- ing. Elections Report: Election Rules, Count Night Rules. Ad Hoc Committees: J-Hop Report, Student Activities Building Administra- tive Board Report, Air-flight to Europe, Cinema Guild Motion-summer show- ings. New Business: Support of Professor Koch, University of Illinois (Season- wein). National Chain Stores Study Committee (Seasonwein). Members' and Constituents' Time Announcements Adjournment Items for next week's agenda Concerts The Stanley Quartet, Gilbert Ross, violin, Gustave Rosseels, violin, Robert Courte, viola, and Oliver Edel, cello, assisted by Clyde Thompson, double- bass, will be heard in the last of their spring series on Wed., April 20, at 8:30 p.m. The concert, to be held in the Rackham Lecture Hall, will include "Elne klelne Nachtmusik" by Mozart, Debussy's "Quartet in G minor" and the Beethoven "Quartet in F major." Open to the public. Foreign Visitors Following are the foreign visitors who will be on the campus this week on the dates indicated. Program arrangements are being made by the International Center: Mrs. Clifford R. Miller. Mr. Jerzy Wroblewski, Vice-Dean of the Law School, University of Lodz, Po- land, April 11-20. Mr. Ramon T. Oben, Dean of the Law School, University of Santa Tomas, Philippines, April 19-20. Miss Margarita Maria Wade, Junior Information Assistant, U.S. Information Service, Buenos Aires, Argentina, April 19. Mrs. Zila da Costa Figueira, Informa- tion Specialist, U.S. Information Serv- ice, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, April 19. -I Mr. Tso-ch'lh Ho, Member of the Legislative Yuan, Republic of China, Taiwan, April 22-24. Mr. Teng-so Kuo, Member of the Leg- islative Yuan, Republic of China, Tai- wan, April 22-24. Mr. Ting-tse Kao, Member of the Leg- islative Yuan, Republic of China, Tai- wan, April 24-27. Lectures Lecture: "The Nucleic Acids and Pro- tein Synthesis in Vitro" will be the subject of a lecture by Dr. Paul C. Zamacnik, Director, John Collins War- ren Laboratories, Huntington Memorial Hospital, Harvard University on Tues., April 19 at 4 p.m. in the Third Level Amphitheater, Med. Sci. Bldg. Lecture: Bishop Shinsho Hansyama, Head Priest. Buddhist Churches in America. Tues., April 19, at 8:00 p.m. in the East Conference Room, Rackham Building. "Kierkegaard: Of Things Philosophic and Religious" will be the subject of a lecture by Dr. Paul L. Holmer, De- partment of Philosophy, University of Minnesota, 4:15 p.m., Tues., April 19, Aud. "B'". Lecture: Dr. F. H. Todd, Director, Ship Division, National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, England, will speak at 4 p.m., Wed., April 20 in 311 West Engrg. on "Ship Hydrodynamic Research in Great Britain." Lecture: Visiting Prof. of Astronomy, Herman Zanstra, will speak on "Rela-' tivity, its philosophical Implications" on Wed., April 20 at 4 p.m. in Rm. 33, Angell Hall. Lecture: "The Guggenheim Collec- tion" will be discussed by Sam Hunter, Chief Curator, Minneapolis Museum of Art on Wed., April 20 at 4 p.m. in the Architecture Aud. Academic Notices Space Astrophysics Colloquium: Dr. H. Friedman, Naval Research Labora- tory, Washington, D.C., will speak on "Solar Radiation Measurements from Rockets" on Tues., April 19 at 4:15 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater. Seminar: Dr. John R. Pierce, Bell Telephone Laboratories, will speak on "Types of Signal Modulation and Space Communication" on Wed., April 20 at 3:30 p.m. in Aud. A. Sociology Colloquium: Prof. W. D. Borrie, Australian National University', will speak on "Population Growth and Research" on Wed., April 20, 4:15 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Build- ing. Doctoral Examination for Wen-Jei Yang, Mechanical Engineering; thesis: "The Dynamic Response of Heat Ex- changers with Sinusoidal Time Depend- ent Internal Heat Generation," Tues., April 19, West Engineering Bldg., Room 222, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, J. A. Clark. Placement Notices JLLETIN Nature of business: Life insurance sales and service. Men with a degree in Lib. eral Arts, Business Administration or Law for Special Agent. Comprehensive training courses over three year period. Additional advanced training when merited. Management appointments are based entirely on merit and can come veryearly in an agent's career. Thurs., April 21 Leo Burnett Company, Inc., Chicago, Illinois. Location of work: Chicago, Ill- in 018. Graduates: June. Advertising Agency. Men with a degree in Liberal Arts or Business Administration for Advertising Training Program. Posi- tions available in Research, Media sel- ection, Copywriting, Art and Layout, TV and Radio Production, Print Pro- duction, AccountrManagement, Merch- andising, Public Relations, Publicity Writing, Contest Planning, Package de- signing, home economics and in other interesting fields. Mutual of New York, Toledo, Ohio. Location of work: Northwestern Ohio, Williams, Fulton, Defiance, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, Allen, Lucas, Wood, Ottawa, Sandusky, Sen- eca, Hancock, Wyandot, Crawford, Har- din & Marion Counties. Graduates: Junee, August. Life Insurance, Accident and Sickness, Hospitalization, Retire- ment Plans for individuals and for em- ployee groups. Men with a degree in Liberal Arts or Business Administration for Life Insurance salesmen. The job would entail the selling of all personal insurance including group and pen- sions. They have openings for manage- ment positions anywhere in the U.S. as progress warrants. Fri., April 22 Moore Business Forms, Inc., Detroit, Michigan. Location of work: Through- out division. Graudates: June, August. Manufacture of business forms. Men with a degreein Liberal Arts or Busi- ness Administration for sales and sales management. The business forms groups! plans and produces forms to individual design and it is the work of their representative to solicit business and contact with customers of the organi- zation. Student Part-Time Employment The following part-time jobs are available 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, 8:00 a.m to 12:30 p.m. Employers oestrous of hiring students for part-time work should contact Bill Wenrich, Student Interviewer at NOrmandy 3-1511, extension 2939. Students desiring miscellaneous odd jobs should consult the bulletin board' in Room 1020, daily. MALE 4 Meal jobs. 1 Cost accountant, experienced (5 days per week, 2 hrs. per day). 4 Library Assistants. 1 Experienced accountant - bookkeeper (20 hrs. per week). 8 Odd jobs. 1 Desk clerk (12:30 noon to 7 p.m., Monday-Saturday). 10 Salesmen (Commission or 3 weeks in June-good money). FEMALE 4 Typists (16-20 hrs. per week). 1 Cafeteria helper (2 days per week, 2 hrs. per day). 1 Experienced cost accountant (5 days per week, 2 hours per day). 1 Typist (full-time during the month of May, then 20 hrs. a week). 4 Library Assistants. 1 Waitress (5 p.m. to 12 midnight, Monday-Friday). 1 Full or half time experienced account- ant. 10 Saleswomen (Commission-3 weeks in June-good money . -...NEWSOM& PHOTO SUPPLIES CAMERA for sale: Leica focoslide, foco- mount, and 50 mm. F3.5 Elmar lens. $30. Call NO 2-1949. D4 FOR SALE FOR SALE-Red 1956 MGA. Call NO 3-3814, ask for Jack, B56 CIROFLEX TWIN ReFlex f3.5 with Flash-case. Used-very good condi- tion. NO 3-3832. (B56 DRIVE for pleasure! 1959 Renault Dauphine. R, H, and sunroof. Array of bright balloons included. Call NO 3-7785 after 9:30 P.M. . r B55 EVERGREENS at wholesale for Univer- sity personnel by University employee. Yews, junipers, arborvitae. Spreading, globe, upright forms. Call Michael Lee at NO' 8-8574. B54; MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS Join Grinnell's Piano Rental Club Lessons for 30 days, piano in your home. First payment $20 after 30 days only $10 per month. X45 RADIO-PHONO SERVICE (Pick up and delivery) Bargain on diamond needles-all types Hi-Fi kits and service Pre-recorded tapes, 2 and 4 track Open 10-6 Monday through Saturdayt HI-Fl STUDIO 1319 South University X43 PIANOS--ORGANS NEW & USED Ann Arbor Piano & Orhn Co. 213 E. Washington NO 3-3109 Xl 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 ORGANS and PIANOS by WURLIT- I ZER, EVERETT, & THOMAS. Mak- ers, restorers, and dealers of rare violins and bows. Also GUITARS and BRASS INSTRUMENTS. Sales - Service - Rentals - Lessonst LINES 2 3 4 1 DAY .80 .96 1.12 3 DAYS 6 DAYS / 2.40 2.80 2.96 3.55 4.14 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 WANTED TO RENT WANTED .TO RENT-Garage, near Law- yer's Club. NO 8-6059. L13 MISCELLANEOUS AROUND SOUTH AMERICA, July 4th to August 5th. Panama, Quito, Lima, Cuzco, Macchu Pichu, Santiago, Bue- nos Aires, Montevideo, Sao Paulo, Iguassu Falls, Rio de Janeiro, Brasilia, Caracas. Followed by optional two weeks in Guatemala, Mexico, or the caribbean area. See all the sights; meet leaders in all countries; lectures and discussions. Leader: DR. HUBERT HERRING, author "Good Neighbors," "A History of Latin America," etc. Ad- dress him: 763 Indian Hill Boulevard, Claremont, California. M JUNE GRADUATES - Commencement Announcement orders will be taken April 4-8 at S.A.B. 9:00 A.M.-5 P.M. M9 ROOM AND BOARD 6 MEN desire board starting April 18. Contact NO 2-6422. E18 BIKES and SCOOTERS There was a young man named Mike Who crossed sweet Betsy on his bike But Betsy was clever She rode her scooter- Now Mike is flying a kite. MOTOR SCOOTERS, INC. CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES NEW ATLAS TIRES "Gripsafe" in sets of 4; 4-670x15, $58.75; 750x14, $74.95; (pius recap- able tires and tax). Other sizes comparably low. Tune-ups. Brake service. HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION Cor. Main & Catherine NO 8-7717 S4 FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Lubrication $1.50 By JUDY OPPENHEIM "If everybody listened to me, I'd be out of a job in six months," Paul Jones, director of public in- formation for the National Safety Council, said yesterday afternoon in a lecture presented bythe De- partment of Journalism. Jones explained that if everyone listened to the appeal of the Na- tional Safety Council and prac- ticed caution on the roads, there would soon be no need for his position. "They're improving cars all the time," he said. "They've got roads so beautifully designed that you need a six-month course at MIT to figure out how to find the exits. But nobody has invented a method of improving drivers yet." "This is a goofed-up age," he continued. "We have pills to make us slow down, pills to make us go faster, and we spend thousands of dollars on experts who tell us how to improve ourselves. 314 Detroit St. NO 8-6927 Z1 Lists Statistics "The only trouble is that when "In the 1950's," Jones said, "we we go to make the improvements did so well that all we killed in they suggest, we can't afford it be- traffic accidents were 935,000 peo- cause we spent the money the im- ple. We injured 95 million more, provement would have cost on the and permanently crippled 3,500,- expert's salary." 000, at a cost of $100 billion toA the American taxpayers." . To emphasize the "staggering" Jones said that if there is to number of fatalities, Jones point- be any reduction in traffic acci- ed out that in all wars fought by dents, drivers themselves must give ZUNDAPP SCOOTER-'58 Vella. Sacri- fice for quick sale. $225. NO 2-5377. Z30 Phone NO 2-4786 for Classified Advertising PERSONAL GOT A GRIPE about Quad food? Come to the "Ol" Swimmin' Hole. F2 TODAY at 1:00 check your mate on the Diag with SDT & ZBT. F59 COME ON, let's move with SDT & ZBT at 1:00 on the Diag. F60 SPIFFY is looking for a ride to Yost Field House on Friday or Saturday. F57 d MADDY 209 E. Liberty. MUSIC NO 3-3395 X40 r American soldiers, including the up "greed, haste and lack of un- r' ani zaijn SUMMER PLACEMENT Civil and Revolutionary Wars, the derstanding of the other driver's Interviews total number of fatalities among viewpoint." Science has done all N oic s [ April 19 and 20: Mr. John Mantheiof tota nuberof ftaltie amog i~OLCeSthe American Red Cross will interview United States troops is 604,733, it can, he said. "The rest is up to '_Women for case aides and recreation 3,000 fewer than the number of the man behind the wheel."' aides. The jobs are at military hO- traffic deaths from 1950-1960. Jones stressed that people must India Students Association, Indian pitals all over the U.S. mov of185 reoltagins th Brt#A1, Apri1 19 and 20. H. J. Heinz Co. of Predicts Toll stop teaching their children that moie o re agains the British iolland. Mich., will be interviewing for English dialogues, '"The Tige r and the Unless something is done to re- it is "smart" to evade the law. He Flame," April 20, 8 p.m., Univ. Higlh summer jobs. Men with a farm back- duce traffic accidents, the pre- called upon mass media such as School, ground are wanted, but not necessary. This is a small summer business of your dicted fatality toll for 1970 is 55,- radio, television and newspapers Ilown and the pay is good. 00. Jones was pessimistic about in particular to urge driving r& Instrction, April 20, 8 p.m., Lane April 19 and 20. Camp Sequoia of the chances of any reduction. safety. Hall. Rock Hill, N.Y. Mr. Shapiro will inter- ____ view for men and women counselors of all ty pes. April 21 and 22. Air C nr Alford of Camp Lawrence Cony of Rochester, N.Y., will i.nterview for men counselors. This is a big YMCA camp and the pay is good. Several new resort's have wvritten in and requested waiters, waitresses, bell- boys, cook,, second cooks, short order cooks, bartenders and maids, etc. The Summer Placement Service is open every afternoon from 1:30 to 5 and Friday mornings from 8:30 to 12, in D528 of the S.A.B. INTERVIEWS The following companies will inter- v.ew at the Engineeroing Placement, 123H1 W. Engrg. Bldg. April 25-Transitron Electronic Corp., Wakelleld, Aiassarhutsetts. All Devrees. ChE, EE. iet., Org. Chem. & Phy ics., BS: E. Physics. April 35-Western anion Telegraph Co., New York. New York. BS: EE & ME. June graduates. Citizenship required (U.S&).I April 26 - iobile oil Company, De- troit, Michigan. BS: IE. June graduates. iMen only. April 26.-U.S. -Army Ordnance Carps. (civilian positionsl, 54 Ordnance In- stallations, located throughout the U.S. All Degrees: AE, ChE, EE, EM, IE, ME & Met., Chem., Physics & Math. MS: Meteorolgy. MS-PhD: Nuclear. June & Aug. graduates. U.S. citizenship re- quired. INTERVIEWS 8 Mon roe(behind Law1The owingcompanies wiill inter- 812 ,t. Wview at the Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 3371. Wed.. April 20 Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co., Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Location of work: Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Sales TasdOopening in all major cities of the U.S. ) UOS 3 Graduates: June, August, February. New Court Favorite Y Spfecial Polka Dot' " ;r Cheesew and Peopperoni 25c1 Pizza Perfect for a ll occasions" " j-r LUNCHEON QUICK SNACK DINNER .plays like gut 0 Stays livelier FOR RENT BEAUTIFUL wood-paneled apt. Kitch- en, immediate and summer. NO 3- 8267. L15 NEW LUXURIOUS air conditioned one bedroom apt. available for summer or longer. Reasonable rent. Call 5-6457. Clo SUMMER: Brand new furnished apt. 2 bedrooms, G.E. kitchen, half block from campus. NO 3-6690. C7 SUMMER: Modern furnished apt. for three, one block from campus, rea- sonable. NO 2-7746. C6 SUMMER: Modern penthouse for four or five. Completely furnished, air- conditioning, sun deck, kitchen fa- cilities including dishes, cooking uten- sils and dish washer. On campus. Call NO 3-5135 evenings. C5 SUMMER: Furnished, 3 bdrm, house, 2 blocks from campus, fully equipped kitchen, wash. mach., garage. NO 8- 6003. C4 SUMMER SUBLET: new large furnished 2 bedroom apt. Call NO 5-7962 or NO 5-8205. Cl FOR SUMMER, air conditioned, 2 year old 4 room apartment, 1 block from campus. Complete kitchen facilities. Call NO 2-3541. C92 SUMMER, well-furnished 3 bdrm. house to be subleased from June 16-Sept. 1. One block from campus, parking. Call NO 3-2871, C94 Coming soon ................. F51 NOTICE It seems our Goose just wants to stay on the loose . . . watch out for it, we know you'll like it. Tau Delta Phi Delta Phi Epsilon F53 SPIFFY is taking a little blue boo to Michigras. 'P54 AEPhi Political Playpen Who is wearing the commonest king's crown? F55 For kids of all ages it's KIDDY KARNI- VAL. Sat., 10-5:30 at Yost Field House. It's spring, be young again. PRICES REDUCED on all rides. P56 Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 87 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessor- lea. 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 ItI" 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 81 WHITE'S AUTO SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 SMITH AUTO UPHOLSTERING Auto and Furniture Refinished - Reupholstered Convertible Tops NO 3-8644 YAHR'S MOTOjR SALES Bumping and Painting Used Cars Bought and Sold NO 3-4510 Both at 507 S. Ashley S. LOST AND FOUND FOUND: 1 pair of men's glasses on Hill back of Stockwell. Call NO 5-8431. A39 LOST: Blue snorkel fountain pen with gold initials (S. D. G.) outside An- gell Hall. Phone NO 3-7541, ext. 433. A BARGAIN CORNER ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks 39c; shorts 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington, W1 BUSINESS SERVICES SPECIAL SALE FOR APRIL ONLY Compare these 1 yr. Subscription Price. Nat'l Our April Sub. Usual Sale Magazine Price Price Price Am Heritage 15.00 12.50 11.50 Audio 4.00 3.00 2.00 Harper's Mag. 6.00 4.50 3.50 High Fidelity .00 4.50 3.50 Horizons 18.00 15.30 14.30 Reporter 6.00 4.50 3.50 Venture 7.00 4.75 3.00 To order or to request quotations on any other magazine, call NO 2-3061 before 5:00 P.M.; NO 3-3018 after. J35 REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop, 224 Nickels Arcade, NO 2-4647. J' Reconditioned Vacuum Cleaners $15.00 and up J. LEABU SALES AND SERVICE 322 E. Liberty NO 3-3604 J59 BUSINESS PERSONAL HONEYMOONERS: Spend your honey- moon at Kay-Ray Log Cottages on East Grand Traverse Bay, 10 miles north of Traverse City. These log cottages with natural fireplaces are in a beautiful pine woods right on the water. They are secluded, modern and equipped for cooking. Linens fur nished. 10% discount to the first 10 reserva- tions received. Write: Kay-Ray, R.R. No. 2, Box 133, Williamsburg, Mich. FF2 PERSONAL; News Letters - Conven- tion Reports-Summer Rushing helps,, mailing service - Multilithed - at- tractive - inexpensive. The Edwards Letter Shop. FF16 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 Tilkin - Al Blaser - Kingsmen - Ray Louis - Larry Kass plus many others. Phone THE BUD-MOR AGENCY, NO 2-6362. FF100 EUROPEAN TOURS, '60. 45 days, $ countries including Oberammergau: Passion Play & Olympics, if desired. All for $705. For details write West- ropa, Box 2053, Ann Arbor. FF1 HELP WANTED BABY SITTER: for two infants, ex- perience desired, weekdays, after- noons. 12 or 1 to 5 p.m. NO 2-7453. H3 KITCHEN HELP WANTED evenings only Monday thru Friday Call Len. Gaba, I NO 2-3215 I36 T O C> 0 U T H MICHIGRAS APRIL 22 and 23 F58 I1. This airplane is actually a flying classroom. The course taught in it is Air Navigation, under real con- ditions. The students are young men who have been selected as pos- sible future leaders of the Aero- space Team. Graduation after 32 weeks of training will win each of the students the honored silver wings of an Air Force Navigator and an Officer's Commission. For certain young men, this training can open the way to a bright career of executive poten- tial. Right now the Air Force is scoring impressive technological advances in the fields of naviga-~ tion, guidance and tracking, elec- tronics and radar. And here is where its highly trained and expe- rienced Navigators will be expected to take over command positions of increasing responsibility. To qualify for Navigator train= tng as an Aviation Cadet, you must be between 19 and 26Yz--single, healthy and intelligent. And you must want to build an exciting, interesting career in the Aerospace Age. If you think you measure up; we'd like to talk to you at the near- est Air Force Recruiting Office. Or clip and mail this coupon. There's a pace for tomorrow's leaders on the Aerospace Team. .j- s 2 SINGLE ROOMS FOR GIRLS in a lovely, well-furnished home 1 block from campus. Linens furnished, free parking. Call NO 3-2871. C93 410 OBSERVATORY near Stockwell, new 2 bedroom apartments. Immedi- ate. $135 per month. Call NO 2-7787 or evenings NO 3-2763. C85 839 TAPPAN near Bus. Ed. School. 2 bedroom furnished deluxe couple or 4 people. Call days NO 2-7787 or eve- nings NO 2-4165. C84 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 NEW CARS FIAT HAS EVERYTHING HAS PRICE-Starts at $1098.00 PRIVATE SALE of my large library, which I have been collecting for over 65 years. Many books nearly 100 years old and over; famous authors on many subjects. Call at 617 Packard from 12 noon to 4 P.M. daily, except Sunday: or phone W. W. Mann for appoint- ment. P13 DISERTATIONS-Multilined, Low cost, quick service. The Edwards Letter Shop, 711 N. University. P8 To those of you who are always wearing gym shoes on campus, Put them to some good use. Run (don't walk) right down to Ralph's for that something extra in foods. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 2-3175 P82 OLYMPIA S.G.C. Cinema Guild, April 21, 22 P41 IF YOU WANT TO LAUGH ... and all of us do, if you want to be enter- tained, ditto for all of us, well, most any psychiatrist would advise you to see "Mother Goose on the Loose" at Michigras, presented by Tau Delta Phi and Delta Phi Epsilon. P37 Pick up petitions for WOLVERINE CLUB chairmanships at S.A.B. be- tween 3 and 5. P16 MODERN 2 bedroom furnished apt. close to campus and hospitals for summer or summer and fall. NO 3-1318. P96 DISPOSING of my large library at pri- vate sale. Many books on many sub- Jects of interest to students. My books are catalogued, ask to see cata- logue of books not on display. Call at 617 Packard 11 A.M.-4 P.M. daily, ex- cept Sunday. P46 'I