dk THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, ,FEBRUARY 26, 1948 MAN T HE MAINSAIL! 'Boats Don't Get Stuck ill Basements' Builder Says By BOB BYERLY Too many .people worry about boats getting stuck in basements, according to Dave Brown, Ann Ar- bor boat builder. "Every time somebody sees my workshop," he says, "they ask me if I can get the boat out all right." In eight years of building sail- boats, the last year on contract to sell, Brown hasn't made one too big for the doorway yet. Builds Dinghies. Dave builds fourteen-foot sail- ing dinghies. Since the beginning Builders Cite Local Space Linitations (Continued from Page 1) tomer to put up a prefab in its en- tirety by himself, subject to in- spection. Total cost: $3,800, plus $175 for the lot. Lumber, which has jumped in cost 300% to 400% since 1941, is yrimarily responsible for the high cost of today's house, the buildersI agree. Cost of Labor The cost of labor, coupled with a slight decline in productivity, adcounts for another share of the cost. In an effort to cut the cost of a house, several Ann Arbor builders are adopting the so-called "modu- lar unit plan" of building. Under this system, four inches is selected as a base for all building mate- rials. Larger panels and long beams are all in multiples of four. As in the automobile industry, such standardization would make it no longer necessary for builders to stock a variety of different sizes. And additions to homes could be made more readily. Investijent Diseouraged It has also been pointed out that the investment market is discour- aging lo-income builders. Rather than issue a loan with a four per cent return, despite the fact that it is insured up to 90% by the FHA, investment companies are currently turning to more lucra- tive enterprises. On the lighter side, a scarcity of trained laborers in Ann Arbor- especially carpenters and brick- layers-is expected to ease after completion of the huge University -projects. $ The three University buildings now under construction will cost an estimated $1,145,000, as com- pared to the cost of home units in Ann Arbor last year-$1,716,115. of last sunner, when the D. M. Brown Boat Company was found- ed. he has built four, all of them sold, and plans to finish one more before he enters North western's engineering school in March. All five of the boats, which do not come inside bottles, are known as Rhodes Bantams, recently de- signed by P. L. Rhodes, well- known naval architect. They are 14 feet long, 51/ feet across and carry 120 square feet of sail area. 'One-design Class' "It's a 'one-design class' boat," Dave says, "made according to strict specifications with the lee- way of only one or two minute optional parts." He builds carefully, using the best materials he can get, and the finished product is a paragon of craftsmanship. Some materials are, of course, hard to find, but he has so far kept production go- ing smoothly. Uses Elbow Grease Besides elbow grease, Dave has a nice assortment of saws, chisels, bits and a home-madedrill that will bore two sizes of holes alter- nately. Dave, who is no relation to Gar Wood, starts out on a boat by building the frtmes,nor crosswise structure, which he sets up on a keel form. Then he sets the keel and lays the stringers, or length- wise framework. From Skeleton Forward Blueprints handy, he planes this skeleton down to get ready for the planking. Four long pieces of white oak, kept watertight by a special marine glue, make up the bottom and side walls. When this is done, the embryo comes off the keel form, is then fitted and supplied with ready-made sails. When Dave was a freshman in high school, the started building a nineteen-footer with a cabin. He finished it, with the help of nearly everybody in the neighbor- hood, in time to sail it two days before going into the Navy. From the start the big problem in the construction of this boat, he says, was to keep the rest of the family from working on it. He added that a couple of frivolous features got in anyway. Foreign Fiancees WASHINGTON, Feb. 25-(I)- A House bill to admit alien sweet- hearts of GI's into the United. States was approved today by the Senate Judiciary Committee. The measure would permit fi-' ancees of members of the armed forces to enter this country for at least three months through 1948. If they married during the three months, they could stay. U Furnishes Slpringbfoal 4to Public Service Institute Offers Broad Fieldl for Graduates The University Institute of 3ub- lie Administration, an unheraided unit virtually unknown to most students, is the springboard for men and women looking toward careers in public adryinistratic. The Institute, which is on a graduate school level, embodies a broad program. Courses are offer- I ed in architecture and design, busi- ness administration, economics, engineering, law, political science, psydhology and sociology. Many Career Opportunities As a result of the vast expansion of functions performed by all lev- els of government, career oppor- tunities in public administration are numerous. Employment in this field isn't restricted to government work in- as much as private governmental research bureaus and quasi-pub- lie agencies absorb people train- ed in governmental administration and finance. For many years graduates of the University entered public serv- ice because their field of special- ization was among those inevitab- ly utilized by government, or by entering a government training program. Then, in 1914, a special curricu- lum was organized to train stu- dents for administrative service. The same year saw the establish- ment of the . Bureau of Govern- ment in Haven Hall. Now the re- search and service unit of the In- stitute of Public Administration, the Bureau of Government in- cludes an extensive library of gov- ernment and related publications. Institute Created in 1937 in 1937 the Institute of Public and Social Administration was created to provide training in the two related fields. In 1945 this Institute was reorganized and two independent units were establish- ed. Under the existing program stu- dents in the institute benefit from close association with public of- ficials throughout the State. In providing, technical assistance, particularly of a research nature, on problems of local and state government, the Institute affords the student opportunity for filed work and laboratory experience. Woman, 123 Years Old(, Dies at Houghton HOUGHTON, Mich., Feb. 25- (P)--Mrs. Mamie Nelson, who claimed to be 123 years old, died today in Houghton County in- firmary. The aged woman, a patient at the infirmary for the past year and a half, said she was born in Ireland on Feb. 3, 1825. For many years she had been blind and ailing, but alert men- tally. Mrs. Nelson said she came to this country when only three weeks old-during the second ad- ministration of President James Monroe. Her husband, Carl Ferdinand Nelson, died in Hancock in 1925. BIOGRAPHY OF RUSSIAN COMPOSER-Valentina Serova and Boris Chirkov, who portray the composer Mikhail Glinka and his wife, in a scene from "The Great Glinka." The film is being presented tonight, tomorrow and Saturday in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre, under the sponsorship of the Art Cinema League. * * * * 'GREAT GLINKA': Art Cinema To Present Film Of .Russian Composer'sLife e S elolfirships (i To 33 'Walter List s Winners Of Hoiber Awards tIhirty-three Bomber Scholar- ship awards of $100 each were an- nounced yesterday by Dean Erich A. Walter, chairman of the Gen- eral Un dergram itae Scholarship Committee. In the literary college the win- ners were William Beppler, Rich- ard Dabek, John Dunn, Stephen Evanoff, Glen Garman, William Juskowitz, Roy Landers, George Love, George Maskeny, Robert Miller, Daniel O'Halloran, Lloyd Partridge, Victor Schneider. Vance Simonds. James Sullivan, George Vetter, Claude Ware, Ger- ald Wetzel, and George Zucker- man. The four students in the engi- neering college who received awards were Paul Greenwood, Robert Harrison, George Johnson, and Roy Levin. There ' were also four winners in forestry school, including Osal Capps, Philip Col- lins, Carl Newport, and George Tourtillot. The remaining awards were given to Merton Burkholder and John Fisher of BusAd. school, Norman Miller and John Vyn of the School of Education, George Mocre of music school, and Steph- en Krenytzky of the architectural college.- orldd's (reyttest Rose IBowlI toverage E ia. ' Albion Preside t To Tecture On mRole of the Smal IICollege' President William W. White- lege in the American Educational house of Albion College, noted Pattern" at 4:15 p.m. today in educator and lecturer, will speak the Rackham Amphitheatre. on "The Place of the Small Col- Before ass-uming office at Al- bion on Spt. 1, 1945, President Whitehouse was dean of the Lib- eral Arts College of Wayne Uni- versity in Detroit for a period of six years. Besides an LL.D. from Wayne University, Dr. Whitehouse holds the Th.D. from Drew University and the Ph.D. from Northwestern University. He is Chairman of the Commission on Teacher Educa- Colleges, and a members of the ~. ~NCommission of Higher Education \ Ce t Ah of the North Central Association of Colleges. As a lecture, Dr. Whitehouse has spoken at the University of Chicago, Northwestern and be- fore the American Sociological So- c'iety. His lecture today is sponsored by the campus chapter of the American Association of Univer- sity Professors and is open to the general public. 1 A "The Great Glinka," Soviet film biography of the famous 19th cen- tury Russian composer, will be shown at 8:30 p.m. today, tomor- row and Saturdayrat the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "The Great Glinka" is a true picture of the composer's life from birth to the completion of his greatest opera, "Ruslan and Lud- mila." The film recreates Mikhail Glinka's childhood, his student days at St. Petersburg, his debut into the brilliant artistic society Library Offers Bible Exhibit Show Old Editions 1i World's 'Best-seller' The world's best seller, the Bible -in many of its various forms as it has come to us through the ages-is now on display in the first floor exhibit cases of the General Library. Most recent edition displayed is Prof. Leroy Waterman's modern translation and interpretation of the Old Testament Song of Solo- mon, T1he Song of Songs. In contrast to this modern edi- tion are displayed ancient Ital- ian, German, Spanish and poly- glot Bibles and psalters. There are in the cases 12th and 13th century Greek manuscripts of the Psalms, Acts and 'Epistles; a leaf of the third century codex of the Epistles of Paul, earliest manuscript of the Greek Bible in existence; several Hebrew 'bibli- cal scrolls; a 1704 edition of the Martin Luther translation; an 1838 reprint of the Coverdale Bible, 1535, first English Bible to appear in print; and a first edi- tion of the King James version, printed in 1611. Many of the Bibles are included in the William Tinker Hollands Memoril collection, contributed by Wiliiam C. Hollands, former superintendent of the University bindery, who himself bound sev- eral of the volumes. of the period, his close relation- ship with the poet, Pushkin, his unfortunate marriage, and his work in composing and producing his first opera, "Ivan Susanin." The title role of "The Great Glinka" is played by Boris Chir- kov, three times Stalin Prize win- ner and star of the "Maxim" tri- logy and "Chapayev." The role of Pushkin is played by Peter Aleynikov, and that of Glinka as a child by Sasha Sobo- lev, an eleven-year-old music stu- dent at the Moscow School of Music. Also featured in the film is Vladimir Druzhnikov, star of "Stone Flower," whose perform- ances have won him rave notices here as well as in the .Soviet: IUn- ion. Acclaimed by the Soviet public and press as one of the outstand- ing -contributions to the Soviet screen, "The Great Glinka" is being shown here, with English titles, by the Art Cinema League. Cam pus Colds Show .Decline The severity of winter weather this year apparently has had no affect on the prevalence of upper respiratory infections, according to Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, Direc- tor of Health Service. "In fact, University students seem to have had little trouble with the common cold so far," he stated, "and if the rate continues to be as low as it has been throughout the rest of the season, w' will be very pleased." However germs and virus are very unpredictable, and there is always the possibility of a sudden epidemic of colds or influenza, he declared. WILLIAM W. WHITEHOUSE . . . speaks here today Health Service Surgeon To Undergo Operation Dr. A. William Coxon, Univer- sity Health Service surgeon, has entered the University Hospital to undergo a rntajor operation Friday. Dr. Coxon was recently given the Civic Service Award by Eagles Lodge for general civic interest in youth groups and atheltics. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Cont ii ed from Page 5) Corning Events Geology and Mineralogy Jour- nal Club: Fri., Feb. 27, 12 noon, Rm. 3055, Natural Science Bldg. Dr. George T. Woolard, of Princton University will speak on the subject, "The Application of Geophysics to the Geological Study of the Continent," (black and white slides). All interested are cordially welcome. Delta Epsilon Pi fraternity: Sun., Feb: 29, 4 p.m., Rm. 302, Michigan Union. Discussion of constitution and annual spring dance. Any male student who is of Helenic rescent or is phil-Hellene is in- vited. German Coffee Hour: Fri., Feb. 27, 3-4:30 p.m., Coke Bar, Michi- gan League. Students and faculty members invited. Inter-cooperative Council Edu- cational meeting Fri., Feb. 27, 8:15 p.m., Robert Owen House.j Professors Gault and Dickinson will speak on 'Cooperatives and Private Enterprise." Refreshments. Public invited. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Friday Evening Services, 7:45 p.m. Student panel discussion on Uni- versal Military Training. All stu- dents invited. Social hour. Instruction in American Ball- room Dancing: Classes, Fri., Feb. 27, 8 p.m., International Center. Record dancing follows. Hold Those Bonds ! At MICHIGAN JACK BENTLEY smokes CHESTERF I ELDS Jack says: "Ches/erficld is my favor- ite cigare/te--you can las/c the difference." A nation-wide survey shows that Chesterfields are TOPS with College Students from coast-to-coast. - PINT'ING for Posters - Handbills Programs - Tickets done at RAMSAY-CANFIELD 119 East Liberty (Across from P-Bell) Phone 7900 C U 4 "Home of 3-Hour Odorless Dry Cleaning" CLEAN ERS 630 South Ashley Phone 4700 r I FOR THE ,,1 .I MAN OF GOOD TASTE + a ' , . 4, I1 f r . A y r mw ::'; ,irf's; '" :; "' ::i?: ir': N ' '.' , t.... -Ensian 450 pages; 4500 pictures .. A\: A\ \\V V' ' " .. 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