,-I THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEI ECA Administration Director To Speak at Rackham Today EXHIBIT ORIENT'S ABACUS: Business Machine Show Opens Here Donald C. Stone, administration director of the Economic Coopera- tion Administration, will speak at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Sponsored by the Institute of Public Administration, Stone will speak on "ECA's Role in the De- fense of the Free World." STONE WAS formerly assistant director of the federal budget and has had a long record of public{ service in both municipal and fed-E eral government. He is the author of several works on police techniques and government affairs and has taught at the University of Chi- cago, American University and Syracuse University. Stone first became connected with the federal government in its WPA program. He has held a num- ber of positions including that of consultant to TVA. . . . Donald Stone . . * * * Prior to assuming the ECA post Stone was influential in the es- tablishment of UNESCO. NO TROUBLE FINDING THE RIGHT GIFT AT STAEB & DAY just cast your eyes over this list and see how easy it is to make a gift selection at Staeb and Day's. Gifts which bear the Staeb nd Day hallmark of quality and distinction. Suits Sweaters Sport Coats Hanson Gloves Overcoats Wool and Silk Scarves Topcoats Van Heuse r Shirts Raincoats Manhattan Shirts Mallory Hats Manhattan Sport Shirts McGregor Sportswear Belts and Suspenders Ripon Slipper Sox Wembley Neckwear Tie Racks Interwoven Hosiery Trouser Racks Hickok Jewelry Wool and Rayon Robe. and Billfolds Handkerchiefs ALL GIFTS APPROPRIATELY BOXED THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN & /e Serve to Serve dl& 309 SOUTH MAIN STREET 4 Caiki 1.Fletcher's Lunch-Fo utain NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Twenty-one companies will ex- hibit their products at the fifth annual Business Machine Show of the business administration school today and tomorrow. The show, to be held in Rms. 46 and 58 of the Business Adminis- tration Building, will be open from 1 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. even- ings. A HIGHLIGHT of the exhibit will be a demonstration of the standard calculating machine of the Orient, the abacus, by Eton Suh, business administration stu- dent from Seoul, Korea, at 3:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. today and tomor- row. The abacus will perform addi- tion, subtraction, multiplication, and division. In the hands of an expert, the abacus can add or subtract faster than any business machine, according to Suh. "However, the Oriental calcula- tor is quite a bit slower in doing multiplication and division prob- lems," Suh conceded . -* * * IN ADDITION to demonstrating his machine, Suh will perhaps ac- cept a challenge to race with one of the modern adding machines. Suh pointed out, however, that he had only been using the aba- cus for five years and was prob- ably not proficient enough with it to beat a modern machine on any difficult problem. Besides the abacus, the display will feature all kinds of business machines, according to Jim Kelly, '52 BAd, chairman of the student committee in charge of arranging the show. DAILY' OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 6) on WUOM and are transcribed on WHRV on Monday at 7:15 p.m., and are broadcast on the Voice of America to foreign countries. Sub- jects for discussion: 1950 Election in the U.S.-Nov. 17. American Family-Nov. 24. Students interested in partici- pating in the programs may con- tact Hiru Shah, Moderator of the Round Table, 2-1644 or Charles Arnade, Organizer of the Program, International Center. Visitors Night, Department of Astronomy: Fri., Nov. 17, 7:30-10 p.m., Angell Hall. Dr. Helen W. Dodson, McMath-Hulbert Obser- vatory, will give a short illustrated talk on "Jupiter, the Giant Planet" in Room 3017. Following the talk the Angell HallFStudent Observa- tory, fifth floor, will be open for observation of the Moon and Jupi- ter. If the sky is not clear, the ob- servatory will be open for inspec- tion of the telescopes and plane- tarium. Chiliren must be accom- panied by adults. University Museums Friday Evening Program: "Flowers of Garden and Commerce." Motion pictures: "Tale in a Teacup," and "The Story of Coffee," Kellogg Au- ditorium, 7:30 p.m. Graduate Mixer: Fri., Nov. 17, 8:30-12 midnight, Rackham As- sembly Hall. All graduate students are invited. German Coffee Hour: Fri., Nov. 17, 3:15-4:30 p.m., League Cafe- teria. Everyone welcome. Need for Aid Agency Seen By 'U'_Prof. America's programs of economic and military aid badly need uni- fication under a central agency, Prof. James K. Pollock, chairman of the political science department, said yesterday in an address at the University of North Carolina. "Since 'V-J Day the United States has spent forty-two and one half 'billion dollars in foreign aid through 28 different programs," the former Hoover Commissioner declared. "It is now perfectly clear that more will have to be spent in other programs now in preparation." Considering the newness and the magnitude of the tasks which con- fronted us overseas since the war, he continued, we have done an amazingly good job, he said. "Now, however, we are no longer justified in continuing the disburs- ed and diffused administration of these huge programs in numerous departments a n d agencies in Washington." An Administration of Overseas Affairs, a central agency to han- dle these aid programs is badly needed, Prof. Pollock said. Such an agency has been recommended by the Hoover Commission and more recently in the Gray report, he pointed out. "With such a unified adminis-' trative organization, we could then begin to develop a genuine career corps of overseas administrators," he proposed. "They would be spe- cially trained to undertake the technical tasks which we are now attempting to perform." Prof. Pollock believes it waste- ful, inefficient and unsound to pro- ceed any longer on the present disorganized basis. VARIED PROBLEMS: Bonisteel Explains Work Of 'U' Board of Regents - 171, University Regent' Roscoe O. Bonisteel yesterday gave his Rack- ham Hall Speech Assembly au- dience an indication of the com- plicated and difficult work of the University Board of Regents. In his lecture, entitled "Speak- ing From One Regent's View- point," Bonisteel said that being a regent could be compared with being a member of any governing body in any community. As such, he continued, definite Ticket Sales Close Friday Today and Friday are the last days students can make Wolverine Club bus reservations for the Ohio State game, according to.Geotge Benisek, club publicity chairman. Round-trip fare is $8.50. All buses will leave Ann Arbor Satur- day morning, November 25. Reservations can be made at the Student Affairs window in the lob- by of the Administration building from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ' No game tickets are available with transportation reservations, Benisek 'emphasized. Prof. Visits 'U' Prof. Masunori Hiratsuka, of the education department at Kyushu University in Japan, visited the ed- ucation school here yesterday. problems of rules and regulations are always- arising. Many of these involve legal re- search, academic employes, ad- ministrative officers, appropria- tions, physical property and the public relations aspect of the Uni- versity, Bonisteel said. Another problem confronted by the Regents concerns Michigan state laws. As an example Bonisteel pointed to the state liquor law which the University must make certain is enforced. Shaping new University policies may be one of the most difficult problems of the Board of Re- gents, Bonisteel said. "It is necessary to consider the attitudes of the state legislature, faculty, alumni, students, admini- strative officers and general pub- lic, any of which can directly af- fect the interest of Michigan tax- payers." Prof. Bromage To Head Panel Prof. Arthur W. Bromage of the political science department will participate in the annual Nation- al Conference on Government in Buffalo, N.Y., Nov. 20-22. 6 Professor Bromage, who is also a city alderman, will lead a panel discussion on "The Citizen Offi- cial's Job." The conference is spon- sored by the National Municipal League. - K ORIENTAL ADDING MACHINE-Eton Suh, Spec., demonstrates his abacus, Oriental calculating machine, which he may use to race a modern business machine. In the hands of an expert, the abacus is said to add and subtract faster than any conventional adding machine. 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