GE TWO TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 6, 19 Engineering Scholarships, Prizes Awarded Students DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN , . ;. , ; , Forty-six engineering students have been awarded prizes and scholarships totaling more than $7,500, the engineering college announced yesterday. Cooley Engineering Essays on non-technical subjects won prizes for three seniors: $400 for Rich- ard Varian, $200 for Henry Knight and $100 for Goron Saxon. The contest was provided for in the will of the late Dean Mortimer Cooley, of the engineering and ar- chitecture colleges. ** * IN THE scholarship division juniors Alan Knoll, Martin La- Pointe, Hyman Levinstein and George Wilcox won $200 Joseph Boyer scholarships. Harriet Hunt scholarships of $200 went to William hains- worth, William Konrad, How- ard Low, James Mellor and John North, all juniors. haymond Decker, '52E, received $200 and Robert Otto, '52E,, was awarded $100 from the Lt. Francis Lowry fund. TWENTY-FIVE Cornelius and Margaret Donovan scholarships were awarded, 18 of them for $200 to: Eugene Bruielle, '53E, James Butt, '53E, James Castelli, '52E, William Elliott, '53E, Martin Ev- eritt, '52E, John Gilbert, '53E, and Robert Haddock, '52E. Also Roger Hammer, '53E, Applications Due For Draft Exam Students may have their last chance to apply for the draft de- ferment test this month, Richard Correll, director of the Armed Services Information'Bureau said yesterday. The deadline for applications is May 15, and Correll urged that all students, including those in ROTC, take the test. All postcard applications should be postmarked not later than mid- night, May 15, Selective Service officials said. Read and Use Deily Classifieds RENT a typewriter and keep up with your work Portables Standard Office Machines Wide Carriage Machines MORRI LL'S 314 S. State Ph. 7177 Henry 'knight, '52E, Robert MacGregor, '53E, Edwin Mat- tausch, '52E, Merle Nelson, '52E, James Nyberg, '52E, Edward Ot- tenhoff, '52E, Wilbur Robinson, '54E, Arthur Sotak, '53E, Duane Van Liere, '53E, and Franklin Vogenitz, '5'3E. Seven of the Donovan grants were for $100, for these February, 1952, graduates: James Burns, Ed- ward Esbrook, Eugene Lawrence, John Merow, Robert Moffat, Char- les Norman and Louis Wolf. The odd sum of $101.62 is list- ed as the value of each of four RoberthGemmell scholarships awarded to freshmen Glenn Coury, Thomas Slykhouse, Hugh Smith and Frederick Waltz. William Danek, Leonard Holder and Paul Van Cleve, sophomores, received Simon Mandlebaum scho- larships. The amount has not been determined. 'U' Glee Club Will Present Hill Concert The Men's Glee Club will present their 93rd annual spring concert at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in Hill Au- ditorium in honor of Mother's Day. 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 shouli be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11 a.- m. Saturdays). SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 149 Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students from 4 to 6 o'clock on Wed., May 9. University Community Center, Willow Run Village: Sun., May 6, Village Church Fellow- s h i p (interdenominational), 10:45 Church and Sunday-school. 4:30 Dis- cussion Group. - Tues., May 8, 8 p.m., Bridge; Dance Committee. Wed., May 9, 8 p.m7 Wives' Club Board Meeting; Choir Practice. Thurs., May 10, 8 p.m., Ceramics; Dance Committee. Sat., May 12, 9 p.m., Semi-Formal Dance. Faculty of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Meeting, Mon., May 7, 4:10 p.m., 1025 Angell Hall. Agenda 1. Consideration of the minutes of the meeting of April 2, 1951 (pp. 1678- 1681). 2. Election to Executive Committee Panel, Library Committee, and Admin- istration Board. Nominating Commit- tee: Professors W. B. Willcox, Chair- man, Shorey Peterson, J. O. Halford, J. S. Rogers, and Associate Professor F. L. Huntley. 3. Memorials for Professor Warner E. Bachmann and Assistant Professor Emeritus Amos R. Morris. Charles G. Murray at 2-2955, Ross Coel- ing at 2-4200 about editorial positions, and Strickland or James Kelly at 3-4087 about the business position. Veterans enrolled under the G.T, Bill who will receive a degree at the end of this semester and who wish to take additional training under the Bill, must apply for a supplemental certifi- cate of eligibility before May 15. Ap- plication should be made in Room 555, Admin. Bldg. Personnel Interviews: Wednesday, May 9- Liberty Mutual Insurance Company will be interviewing men for sales posi- tions. Thursday, May 10- National Life Insurance Company will be interviewing men interested in sales for the Ann Arbor area. Union Central Life Insurance Com- pany, Detroit, will be interviewing men interested in sales. The Washington National Insurance Lectures University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Psychology.P"Develop- ments in the Theory of Perception." Professor Jerome S. Bruner, Depart- ment of Social Relations, Harvard Uni- ,versity, Mon., May 7, 8 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Philosophy. "Sense and Denotation of Names." Professor Alon- zo Church, Princeton University. Tues., May 8, 4:15 p.m., Room 1025, Angell Hall. University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Fine Arts. "Sightseeing with Boswell-Old Houses and Gardens of England." Helen Lowenthal, Lectur- er in Fine Arts and Staff Tutor, Cam- bridge University, England. Tues., May 8, 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Academic Notices i i a 3 3 1 Company, Evanston, Illinois, is looking College of Literature, Science, and for stenographers, typists, women for the Arts. Students wishing to attend claim adjusting, and any LS & A or summer sessions at other institutions Business Administration women who should call at the Office of Admissions, would be interested in office work. 1524 Administratiop Building, to obtain They will arrange appointments in our the 'necessary forms for approval of office if efough women are interested. courses they wish to elect. This mat- For further information and appoint- ter should be taken care of not later ments for interviews, call at the Pu- than June 1 in order to insure ap- reau of Appointments, 3528 Administra- proval. Lion Bldg. Set Theory Seminar: Mon., May 7, 3 Personnel Requests: p.m., Rm. 2016 Angell Hall. Mr. J. R. The Cook County (Chicago) Depart- Shoenfield will speak on "Recursive ment of Welfare is in need of Casework- Sets." ers for their Public Assistance Division. Professor Dunham will meet his His- Coast Guard Headquarters has several tory 130, Economic History of Europe. vacant positions of naval architect, since 1750, on Wed., May 9, in Room Grades GS-5 and GS-7. These positions 307 Rom. Lang. Bldg. do not exist as a result of an emergency expansion program and therefore offer Doctoral Examination for Robert An- a good possibility of permanent em- derson. Anthropology; t h e s i s : "A ployment. Study of Cheyenne Culture History, The Langley Aeronautical Laboratory, with Special Reference to the Northern Vi . 4..in ; in A ,ri f i n...th., .ii Chevent'ne~r. "Tues. May8. 3024 Museum MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .54 1.21 1.76 3 .63 1.60 2.65 4 .81 2.02 3.53 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline doily except Saturday is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. ROOMS FOR RENT FURNISHED Extra Large Suite-Outside entrance. Private lavatory and stall shower, large clothes closet. Good for 2 or 3 MALE students. Also single room. Ph. 2-3618. )50R DESIRABLE SINGLES & DOUBLES- Graduate or business women. Very good location. Ph. 2-5232. )44R ROOMS FOR MALE STUDENTS-One double and one single near Law Club and Bus. Ad. School. Continuous hot water, showers. 808 Oakland. Ph. 22858. )12R CAMPUS Tourist Home. Rooms by Day or Week. Bath, Shower, Television. 518 E. William St. Phone 3-8454. )1R BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING WANTED-To do in my home. 830 S. Main, 7590. )19B VIOLA STEIN - Experienced typist. Legal, master's, doctor's dissertations; foreign manuscripts, etc. New Elec- tromat typewriter, 513 E. William. Ph. 2-9848. )2B GOOD RENTAL TYPEWRITERS now available at Office Equipment Serv- .ice Company, 215 E. Liberty. Guar- anteed repair service on all makes of typewriters.8 TYPING-Manuscripts, theses, etc. Call Lois Spaide, 2-0795 or 2-7460. )20B PERSONAL LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 122 E. Liberty - Phone 8161 )2P RAY HATCH will patch that match. Learn to dance with RAY HATCH DANCE STUDIO 209 S. State - Phone 8083 )4P FOR RENT MEN'S SINGLE-One block from Rack- ham, 120 N. Ingalls, Ph. 2-6644. )18F LOST AND FOUND LOST-Silver cigarette lighter near Bus. Ad. school Monday morning. Phi Gam- ma Delta frat. pin Wed, evening vicin- ity S. Univ. Both initialed G.F.Q. Call George Qua, 2-3256. Reward! )71L FOUND-In A.H. bills of large denom- ination. Loser call at 105 Tappan. ')70L LOST-Garnett dinner ring. Univ. vi- cinity. Reward offered. 2-3062. )64L LOST IN ANGELL HALL-Parker 51 pen, maroon & silver. Please call or re- turn to Administration Bldg. lost & found. Reward. Phone 2547 Alice Lloyd 3-1561. )45L FOR SALE ROLLEIFLEX, f3.5 Tessar lens, Heiland solenoid and case., Excellent condi- tion. Call Pete at 2-0026 after 7 p.m. )72 HELBROS-17-Jewel chronograph Swiss wrist watch, unused, best offer. Phone 3-8698. )78 FOR SALE-1937 Studebaker 4-dr. se- dan, radio and heater. $75. Call Don 7220. )79 EVERGREENS - Low spreading, bush, upright. Junipers, arbor vitae, dwarf pines, etc. Wholesale prices. M. Lee, 1208 Chemistry or Tel 8574 mornings. )1 FOR SALE PHOTOGRAPHIC equipment, Kodak en larger, 40x40 screen. Call Shah 8598 )75 JACKET SALE - M4en's rayon jacket $3.49, sizes S-M-L, colors tan, dark blue, light blue, dark green, gray Open until 6 p.m. Sam's Store, 122 Washington. )5 GOLF CLUBS-Men's matched Joe Kir wood set. 4 irons, 2 woods. Never bee used. $30.95. Ph. 2-8692. )6 MERCURY II, F2.7 1/1000, case] fas film, accessories. Good condition. Cal 432 Mich. 2-4404. )7 ROLLEIFLEX, f3.5 Tessar lens, Heil solenoid and case. Excellent condi tion. Call Pete at 2-0026 after,7 p.m J. H. COUSINS ON STATE STREET Terry Cloth Shorts $2.95 Bras to match $2.50 White and colors. Perfect for sunning or active sportswear. )3 PARAKEETS, canaries and zebra iinch- es; bird supplies and cages. Reasoi- able. 562 S. Seventh. Ph. 5330. )2 TRANSPORTATION WANTED-Ride to ;and from Annapolis, Maryland for June. week, May 25 o June 1. Will share driving. Phone Diane 9201. )25T MISCELLANEOUS WANT TO PARTICIPATE in yacht race to Honolulu, June 18 . Sept. 5? All expenses, $750. Contact Ken, 338 Cool- ey, 2-4591. )11M ALTERATIONS ALTERATIONS-Lady garments. Catl- erine near State Street. A. Graves, Ph. 2-2678. )1A I -_ . _ _ ! Virginia, is in neea os a mamematicai The concert will feature such 4. Consideration of reports submitted statistician with a Master's or Doctor's outstanding campus talent as Rus with the call to this meeting. a. Ex- degree. Inasmuch as the applicant so- Christopher who copped first ecutive Committee, Professor B. D. lected for appointment will evaluate Thuma. b. Executive Board of the scientific data, some background in en- place honors in this spring's Gul- Graduate School, Professor Leo Gold- gineering or physics is desirable. antics competition, and the Novel- berg. c. Deans' Conference, Dean Hay- The Buckman Laboratories, Memphis, aires, who won third place. ward IKniston. Tennessee, (consulting and manufac- 5. Announcements. turing chemists) is looking for a man The Glee Club has gained na- 6. New business. with training for process industries and tional acclaim for itself and for in microbiology to do sales and techni- the University during the past Late permission for women students cal service work in the field of indus- year. through its successful Mid- who attended the May Festival con- trial microorganism control in the Chi- st tour and a nation-wide than 11:40 p.m. This maximum time The Detroit Civil Service Commission 1.:C , IU P.,q a , .: fU 1 Bldg., 3 p.n. Chairman, L. A. White. Aero-Thermodynamics Seminar: Dr. M. V. Morkovin of the Aeronautical En- gineering Department will speak on Tues., at 3:45 p.m., in Room 1504 East Eng. Bldg. Subject, "On Mixing of Suipersonic Jets at Right Angles." Visi- tors welcome. 2': 4 KIDDIE RELIABLE SITTERS 3-1121. KARE available. Phone )10B Get a fine lightweight' English DAWES TOURING BICYCLE for that vacation trip '4 '1 II broadcast which they gave in limit allows for the bad weather con- Cleveland at Christmas time. ditions. Organized in 1859, the club is today the oldest musical organiza- tion on campus and probably among the earliest of college glee clubs. The Saturday night concert will be open to the public free of charge, but reservations for groups of morethan 20 must be made at the Office of Student Affairs. JNOW SHOWING Late permission for women students who attended the French play on Wed., May 2, will be no later than 10:40 p.m. The final deadline for securing and returning Men's Judiciary petitions is Tues., May 8, These offices are open to any male student. Petitions may be secured and submitted at the Stu- dent Legislature Bldg., 122 S. Forest, from 3 to 5 p.m. Freshman-Sophomore Natural Resour- ces Conference: Mon., May 7, 7:30 p.m., 2039 Natural Science Bldg. Prof. W. Kynoch, speaker. Subject, wood tech- nology. Attendance required of fresh- men. Sophomores and new transfer students urged to attend. Present and Prospective Business Ad- ministration Students: The deadline for submitting petitions for the positions of editor, associate editor, or business manager of The Monroe Street Journal has been post- poned to 5 p.m., Mon., May 7. They may be stbmitted in room 150 BA. For furtner information see the Daily Official Bulletin for Thurs., May 3, or call Charles F. Strickland at 2-2969, X4 1217 Prospect Street Fior Delivery Call 7171 announces examinations for the foillow- ing positions: Chemistry Aid, closingI date May 15; Technical Aid (BusinessI Administration women graduates) clos- ing date June 29; Junior Clerk (Male) closing date June 29; and various levels of all types of engineers. For further information call at the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Admin- istration Building. Summer Employment: A representative from The Pure Oil Company of Troledo, Ohio, will be in- terviewing student mechanical, chemi- cal and petroleum engineers for sum- mer employment, Thurs., May 10. A representative from the Russell Kelly Office Service of Detroit will be interviewing women interested in sum- mer clerical employment in the Detroitf area, Fri., May 11L A representative from the Twin Ga- bles Resort (Saugatuck, Miehigan) will be interviewing students for the sum- mer employment as waitresses and a cook, Tues., May 8 from 3-5 p.m. Call Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 2614 for appointments. Concerts TYPEWRITERS and Festival. The University Musical 314 S State St. announces May Fcstival con -__314_SStateSt. s follows:-- ay, 2:30 p.m. William Kapell, Oscar Natzka, bass; Universityj Union )Laberts"Sutmmem s 'ill and Testament"); Phladel- rchestra; Thor Johnson, conduc- IER'5 DAWES BICYCLES are being featured as the "youth hosteling bikes of the year" by a leading New York dept. store. And little wonder, too! Three excellent precision built models made of 531 Reynolds -, Steel and rustless alloys, weighing 23 to 28 pounds. Dealers: Dave Smith and. Towne Conover - 1017 Oakland -- phone 7138, als* 25-7971 - evenings. I di FOUNTAIN PENS. service. Morrill's, )4B tor. Sunday, 8:30 p.m. Patrice Munsel, coloratura soprano; Philadelphia Or- chestra; Eugene Ormandy, conductor. Student Recital: Dorothy Webb, pi- anist, will play a recital at 8:30 p.m., Tties., May 8, in the Architecture Audi- torium, in partial fuifillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree. A pupil of John Kollen, Miss Webb's program will include composi- tions by Bach, Beethoven, Schumann, and Barber, and will be open to the public. Exhibitions I Architecture Building, exhibition cor- ridor, main floor. "Art Print Loan Col- lection" from the J. L. Hudson Com- (Continued on Page 4) An Intimate Theatre Bringing Cinema Triumphs From All Nations i Z A. --- 1 A " ill a IL LDA1Y CARDS OVERBECK BOOK STORE ANTIQUES SHOW Wednesday, May 9th, Through Friday, May 11th. Masonic Temple, 327 So. 4th Avenue Ann Arbor, Michigan Open 11 A.M. to 10 P.M. daily closing Friday 9.P.M. Dealers in and out of the state will be represented at this out- standing show. Some furniture will be exhibited from the Judge Samuel Dexter's home. All exhibits are for sale. ' dill I 1216 South University --I ENDING TODAY Frm1:30 P.M. "Here is a sly, sexy and romantic tale about the composer Offenbach, beautifully played by Pierre Fresnay." -Winsten, Post - s } rM .. '- ': t ,, 4) j- OPEN DAILY 1:15 Running a classified ad Every-day is Sure to bring you nusual results and -- -- ---- - ---- Starts Today! IT'S SWELL Continuous From 1 P.M. fif arring HE FOUGHT HIS WAY BACK... TO THE TOP OF THE WORLD! THE REAL-LIFE ADVENTURE OF BEN HOGAN! RE N FORD Pierre Fresnay * Yvonne Printemps MINIATURES: "Scarlet Pupernickel" - "King of The Rockies" Playing Through Tuesday I~mII Shows at 3, 5, 7 and 9 Lots of good ANNE BAXTER it *N I E IS Timely customers and a dales as well. 3 Place Your Ad Now in I W &WN' W V N60 U I