THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 2. 1951il PERSONAL LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 122 E. Liberty - Phone 8161 )2P PROFESSORS! Lithoprint your class textbook, laboratory manual, or book- lets. Call us for free estimate. Braum- Brumfield Inc. Ph. 3-8243. )1P LOST AND FOUND LOST-Dark brown leather jacket in East Quad, Feb. 24. Finder return to 119 Strauss, E.Q. Reward! )16L LOST - Pair glasses, natural frames, straight ear pieces. Lost Feb. 21. Own- er desperate. Reward. Call Shirley Forsyth, 2-3225. )15L LOST-Light blue overcoat, ATO house, Sun., Feb. 18 during rushing. Call Bruno Boelstler, 2-5553. )12L HELP WANTED STUDENT'S WIFE or Coed to work at snack bar. Day hours Monday through Friday. Phone 5464 after 1:00. )18H FOR RENT LARGE DOUBLE ROOM-Gas heat and shower, private entrance, for men students. Ph. 2-1646. )16F FOUR ROOM APARTMENT for rent to middle aged couple. Moderately priced. Phone 3-0667. )15F ALTERATIONS ALTERATIONS-Ladies' garments. 510 Catherine near State. Alta Graves. Tel. 2-2678. )5A Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices shouIa be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11 a.- m. Saturdays). FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 101 Notices Change in Student Addresses: Re- port immediately to the Registrar, Room 1513, Administration Building, any change of address during the semester. Faculty of .the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Meeting, Mon., Mar. 5, 4:10 p.m., Room 1025, Angell Hall. Agenda 1. Consideration of the minutes of the meeting of February 12, (pp. 1663- 1665). 2. Presentation of new members. 3. Resolution for Professors Peter O. Okkelberg, John F. Shepard, and John G. Winter. 4. Memorial for Professor Daniel L. Rich. 5. Consideration of reports submitted with the call to this meeting. a. Execu- tive Committee - Prof. F. H. Test. b. Executive Board of the Graduate School - Prof. I. L. Sharfman. No re- port. c. Deans' Conference, Dean Hay- ward Keniston. No report. 6. Announcements. . 7. New business. LS&A Students: No courses may be dropped from your original elections after Fri., Mar. 2. Women Students: Because of the Assembly Ball, all women students have a 1:30 a.m. late permission on Fri., Mar. 2. INTRAMURAL SPORTS: Presbyterians, Jimoes in in Playoff Contests' I-M Scores I I5 By DICK SEWELL Independent League basketball playoffs got under way last night with five contests at the IM Build- ing. In the important battle for first place the Presbyterians and the Jimoes advanced by dropping the Foresters and Ghouls, respectively. THE POWERFUL Presbyterians, winner of division IV laurels, had little trouble with previously un- defeated Foresters as they coasted to a 33-22 victory. Forward Bruce Mase repeat- ely snuck under the losers' bas- ket to convert his mates' long passes to easy tallies, and man- aged a total of 12 points for the evening. Forester Wally Jeffrey led his squad with 10 counters in addi- tion to hooping in two points for the Presbyterians on an amusing mix-up play. * * * SCORING ALMOST at will, the Jimoes joined the Presbyterians in the mad scramble for first place honors by drubbing the Ghouls, 40 to 25. . Having been held to a meagre 14 point total at the half, the Jimoes exploded in the last per- iod leaving a bewildered Ghouls quintet in their wake. Bill Reader and Mark Pincus both turned in outstanding per- formances for the victors. Reader twisted 14 markers through the nets from his center position and Pincus chalked up 12, mostly on long set shots. THE LARGEST SCORE of the night was turned in by a free- wheeling Mealmarter five which walloped a hapless Roger Williams aggregation by a 41 to 6 count in a second place battle.- , Bob Fleming turned in the evening's best individual scoring effort racking up 19 big points. Team-mate Larry Stoimenoff was runner-up with 10 tallies. In third place clashes Hawai- ians "A" squeezed by the Archi- tects, 24 to 20, BASKETBALL Delta Tau Delta 31, Zeta Psi 27 Phi Kappa Tau 30, Kappa Nu 7 Triangle 28, TKE 10 Chi Phi 16, Alpha Phi Alpha 9 Phi Sigma Delta 38, Betas 36 SAE 36, Psi Phi 28 Psi Upsilon 36, Acacia 31 ZBT 36, Delta 'Chi 25 Alpha Epsilon Pi 34, Kappa Sigma 17 Phi Gams 49, Sig Eps 33 Sigma Chi 31, Phi Delta Theta 17 Phi Kappa Sigma 20, Phi Psit 19 Pi Lambda Phi 30, Delta Chi 5 Sig Eps 25, Phi Sigma Kappa 14 Sigma Chi 39, Alpha Sigma Phi 7 Phi Sigma Delta 35, Zeta Psi 19 Sigma Chi 34, SAM 10 SAE 23, Sig Eps 12 Chi Psi 11, Alpha Epsilon Pi 9 Phi Delta Theta 41, Zeta Psi 18 Chi Phi 14, Lambda Chi 12 Tau Delta Chi 25, Triangle 19 Phi Kappa Sigma 91, DU 19 Phi Psi 17, Kappa Sigma 15 Delta Tau Delta 35, Theta Xi 11 Betas 27, ZBT 15 ATO 20, Pi Lambda Phi 11 Hinsdale 32, Anderson 30 Chicago 38, Adams 24 Prescott 25, Allen-Rumsey 13 Winchell 41, Cooley 37 Allen-Rumsey 38, Anderson 14 Winchell 31, Hayden 22 Hinsdale 35, Lloyd 22 Tyler 33, AndersonC24 Allen-Rumsey 45, Cooley 11 Williams 28, Strauss 15 Adams 32, Greene 24 Hayden 38, Lloyd 19 Chicago 27, Vaughn 12 Prescott 27, Michigan 15 Reeds Raiders 35, Midshipmen 22 Newman 46, MCF 45 rd application blanks may be obtained at the Scholarship Division, Office of Student Affairs, Room 1059, Adminis- tration Bldg. The completed applica- tions must be returned by Mar. 31. Generation is interested in work by students in all departments and from all schools. We are now accepting con- tributions in non-fiction, fiction, poe- try, drama, music, dance, etc. for the next issue. Turn them in at the Gen- eration Office, first floor of the Stu- dent Publications Bldg. Open all day. Deadline, Mar. 20. at June graduates in Electrical and Aero- nautical Engineering in Room 1521 E. Engineering Bldg., Mar. 6. They will interview Math., Physics, and Mechani- cal Engineering students in Room 225, W. E. on Mar. 7. See Aero. Eng. and Mech. Eng. bulletin boards for further information. Employment Interviews, Bureau of Appointments: Mon., Mar. 5: Corning Glass Works, Corning, N. Y. - BS, MS & PhD. can- didates in Mechanical, Civil, Chemical, Electrical, Metallurgical and Industrial Engineering; Physics, Engineering Phy- sics, Chemistry, and Physical Chemis- try. Also openings for Accountant, Business Administration, Technical Sales, Production Administration and Quality Control. Openings both im- mediately and for June graduates. Tues., Mar. 6: General Electric Com- pany, Business Training program; for both men and women, primarily ac- counting majors. Group interview in morning; individual appointments aft- erward. Wed., Mar. 7: Brunswick-Balke-Col- lender Co., of Chicago and Muskegon: To interview Mechanical and Industrial Engineers, and Accountants. Wed., Mar. 7: Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co., Jeffersonville, Indiana, plant, will interview Chemical and Mechanical Engineers. Wed. and Thurs., Mar. 7-8: U. S. Navy Recruiting Station will interviewt women who are interested in commis- sions in the WAVES. Make appointments at the Bureau of Appointments, Room 3528, Administra- tion Bldg., 9-12 and 2-4. Academic Notices Graduate Students expecting to re- ceive the master's degree in June, 1951, must file a diploma application with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Fri., Mar. 2. A student will not be recommended for a degree unless he has filed formal application in the of- fice of the Graduate School. Language Examination for kthe A.M. In History: Fri., Mar. 2, 4 p.m., Room 2029, Angell Hall. Those planning to take this examination must sign list in History Office, Room 2817, S. Quad. You may bring dictionaries. Make-up Examination in History: Sat., Mar. 3, 9-12 noon, Room 229, An- gell Hall. Any student who missed the final examination in History and plans to take the make-up must sign the list in the History4 Office, Room 2817, S. Quad. Astronomical Colloquium: Fri., Mar. 2, 4:15 p.m., Observatory. "Notes for a New Cosmogony," by David Layzer, National Research Council Fellow. Concerts The Chicago Symphony Orchestra, under its new conductor, Rafael Kube- lik, will be heard in the Choral Union Series, Sunday evening, March 4, at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. Program: Barber's Overture to "The School for Scandal; Dvorak's Symphony No. 1; Hindemith's Four Temperaments; and the Overture to "Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg" by Wagner. Tickets are available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Tower daily, Monday through Friday; and one hour preceding the concert at the Hill Auditorium box of- fice. Beethoven Sonatas. The second pro- gram in the current series of Beetho- ven Sonatas for Violin and Piano, played by Gilbert Ross, violinist, and Mabel Rhead Field, pianist, will be heard at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Mar. 2, Rack ham Lecture Hall. It will include So nata in A major, Op. 30, No. 1, Sonata in E-flat maor, Op. 12, No. 3, Sonata in' A minor, Op. 23, and Sonata in G major, Op. 30, No. 3. The program for Friday evening, as well as the final one on Tues., Mar. 6, will be open to the public without charge. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. Portraits-Museum of Art Collec- tion; Art Privately Owned in Ann Ar- bor. Kyoto (LIFE photographs) through Mar. 7. Weekdays 9-5, Sundays 2-5. The public is invited. Events Today Michigan Christian Fellowship: Sports night at the I.M. Bldg. Meet at Lane Hall, 7 p.m. Wesleyan Guild: "Beyond the Reef," Guild and Hawaiian Club party, 8 p.m., at the Guild. Canterbury Club: 4-6 p.m., Tea and Open House followed by supper, from which we will go at 8 p.m., to "Dead of the Night." a play, in the new parish Aall. Westminster Guild: Open House, 8 p.m., First Presbyterian Church. Coffee Hour at Lane Hall, 4:30-6 p.m. Forum on College and University Teaching: Library Lecture Hall, 3-5 p.m. Subject: Good Teachers-Why Are They Good? Panel: Frank X. Braun, Assistant Professor of German. Alfred M. Elliott, Assistant Professor of Zoology; Phillip S. Jones, Assistant Professor of Mathematics; Wilbert J. McKeachie, Assistant Professor of Psy- chology; William B. Palmer, Assistant Professor of Economics; Algo D. Hen- derson, Professor of Higher Education. Graduate Outing Club: Sports Nite, IM Building. Meet in lobby, 7:15 p.m. Bring gym clothes and shoes, bathing suit, ID card. University Museums, Friday evening program: "Beginners of Civilization." 2 movies: "Rhythm of Africa" and "People of the Congo," Kellogg Audi- torium, 7:30 p.m. Hostel Club: Sports and swimming at I-MA Building tonight. Coming Events The Summer Projects Office in Lane Hall will be open daily from 3:30-5 p.m. Student workers will be there to give information on travel, work, and study programs in the USA and foreign countries. Quarter4eck: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Tues., Mar. 6, Room 3-D, Union. Speaker: Mr. Corin, Great Lakes. "The State Auto Ferry." Film: The Antioch College moving picture Campus Frontiers will be shown Sat., Mar. 3, 10 a.m., Room 4009, UHS. Visitors welcome. Graduate Outing Club: Sun., Mar. 4: Hiking, or ice skating at Ice Rink. Meet in Outing Club room, northwest corner of Rackham, 2:15 p.m. All grads welcome. Hostel Club: Bowling at Twentieth Century on West Huron at 3 p.m., Sat., Mar. 3. Call Margaret Thompson, 8803. Evening Sing at Amneus home on Ellsworth Road, Sat., Mar. 3. Call Mary R wley, 3-8687. i ;i. - I I I I ®i it g I k I CEE 4 STARTING TODAY Silvana Mangano is A I L NOTHING SHORT of A SENSATION!.. full-bodied and gracefully muscular, with rich voice and a handsome pliant face. It is not too excessive to describe her as Anna Magnani minus fifteen years, Ingrid Bergman with a latin disposition and Rita Hayworth plus twenty five pounds. Passion toils and tumbles through 'BITTER RICE'." -BOSLEY CROWTHER, N. Y.Times Dr' SANTIS' I "~1~ev~'cq