PAGE TWENTY TWO THE MICMGAN DAILY SUNDAY. AP.PMMUWR IS- !r ETET W H ICIA AL Th~AVqpi5l KIE L.. - I -' -3V1\L a, , .. i. e~*ln ARVN z £Uhyh, WELCOME STUDENTS U Come to A for the Best in Waffles, Lunches, Dinners and Chicken-in-the-Basket LSA's Dean May Serve Book Group Dean Charles E. Odegaard of the University's Literary College has been asked to serve on the "Committee on Booke Abroad," one of two commissions advising the United States Information Agency. - Other people serving with Dean Odegaard include presidents of several large publishing companies, and representatives of the libraries at Harvard University and the University of Illinois. Registration Hysteria " FORD COMPANY GIFT: 'Swimming Pool' Built I For Reactor's Uranium 1100 EAST CATHERINE Phone NO 8-9538 Open 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. Closed Mondays a V HEADQUARTERS for I1 STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES OFFICE FURNITURE, TYPEWRITERS and FOUNTAIN PENS Smith-Corona TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable ALL MAKES, bought, sold, rented, repaired " /. I I Terms: We try to suit customer. Typewriter Repair Work a Specialty FOUNTAIN PENS all makes STUDENT SUPPLIES Sales & Service by factory trained men. The University's nuclear reac- or, now being constructed on the north Campus, will have a 40,000 gallon "swimming pool" in which the uranium source will be housed. The walls of the pool will rise to a height of 26 feet from the already completed U-shaped base. The area in which the reactor core will be located in the lower 16 feet of the pool will be six and a half feet thick. The walls at the top will be three and a half feet thick. It is estimated that more than 800 tons of special high-density concrete will be used to make the reactor pool walls. The mixture will be more than 60 per cent denser than ordinary concrete. The University is building the reactor as an addition to its al- ready completed atomic research building, the $1,500,000 Phoenix Memorial Laboratory. When completed, it will be the most powerful private reactor in the nation. It will have a maxi- mum operating power of 1,000,000 watts. The reactor building, a window- less, four-story cube, is scheduled U.S, Official Revisits City's 'Blighted Area' A field representative of the ur- ban renewal division of the Hous- ing and Home Agency has devisit- ed the city to look over Ann Arbor's so-called blighted area, City Council President Prof. A. D. Moore of the engineering college said Thursday, Prof. Moore said George Conk- lin of Chicago, following his sec- ond visit here Wednesday, is "even more confident in his opinion that the area will continue to go down- hill unless steps are taken." The area eyed for rehabilita- tion by city, officials is bounded roughly by Detroit, DepotM "ain and Catherine Streets. It has been pointed out that the area is not a slum but is an area of unrelated land uses. The council president said Conklin reiterated an e a r 1 i e r statement that "the area looks Suitable for redevelopment under a Housing and Home Agency pro- gram." Since the representative's first visit, Ann Arbor's City Council has directed the City Planning Commission office to lay the groundwork for asking for a plan- ning loan from the agency. for completion in December, according to Dean Ralph A. Saw- yer of the graduate school, who is the director of the Phoenix Pro- ject. A self-sustaining "chain reac- tion" will be started shortly after the fuel is installed. Over a period of a few months, the power of the reactor will then be increased slowely. The increase will con- tinue until it reaches an average operating level of 100,000 watts. A gift of $1,000,000 from the Ford Motor Company Fund has made the construction and use of the reactor possible. WORK: Furnishing Apartments Quite a Job The gap which separates a bar- ren cubicle and a "liveable" room is transcended only by much toil, both physical and mental. But for those University stu- dents fortunate enough to have the necessary cubicle, the job of outfitting it is a pleasant one, work notwithstanding. The end results are as widely varied as the personalities of the toilers. Ann Arbor shops do a booming business at this time of year. Es- sentials such as coffee-pots, fry- ing pans, lamps, not-too-expensive items of furniture are bought up in a steady stream. The more esoteric shops are beseiged by tragic-eyed shoppers with a pen- chant for bamboo curtains, per- forated sculpture, and agonizingly contorted lamps. Still other shoppers go in for the sturdier, more home-grown furni- ture. Husky lamps hewn from rugged oak, pot-bellied coffee- makers, sturdy-legged chairs with comfortably fat cushions make up the staples of their buying. Two of three occupants of a four-room apartment near dampus spent two days in argument over which, panting should be hung 'on their living room wall. One in- -sisted on Picasso's "The Lovers" while his roomate demanded "Girl in Pink" by Modigliani. As an apartment begins to take shajpe, students new to the off- campus life are made aware of the exigencies of house-keeping., An apartment crew which arrived early were dismayed when, after two weeks of failing to empty the garbage, a flock of fruit-flies took over the disposal problem. Stationery Study Lamps Note Books Fountain Pens Loose Leaf Note Books Greeting. Cards Typewriter Supplies SPECIAL ON SURPLUS 3 ring heavy, black note books 1I ring 63c 1 /2" ring 97c 2" ring $1.21 CHAIRS DESKS Since 1908 4Su ILL'S 314 South State St. FILES Phone NO 8-7177. NO 3-2481 IN THE WAKE OF A STORM-Tables in the classification room at registration became rectangles of debris as students frantically discarded old schedules and began desperately to design one ac- ceptable to all the classification desks concerned. F The Typewriter, Office Furniture and Stationery Store. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Mental Health Research Unit Will Open This Month in NPI I CHORAL UION CONCERTS ZINKA MILANOV, Soprano ............... Tuesday, October 11 Queen of the Metropolitan BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Charles Munch, Conductor ..... .... .... Monday, October 24 THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA George Szell, Conductor .......... ........ Sunday, November 6 NATHAN MILSTEIN Violinist .......... Monday, November 14 World Renowned SHAW CHORALE AND ORCHESTRA Robert Shaw, Conductor . .". . ... . . . . . . . . ., Tuesday, November 22 VIENNA CHOIR BOYS (2:30 P.M.)' ...".. .". Sunday, January 15 Research into mental health needs and problems got underway this month in the new Mental Health Research Unit of the Neuropsychiatric Institute. Financed by a $175,000 approp- riation from the State Legislature, research activities are headed by Dr. James G. Miller, Dr. Ralph W., Gerard and Anatol Rapoport who were appointed to the Medical, School faculty bythe Regents in their July meeting. Concentrate on Causes With Dr. Miller coordinating activities, the staff will concen- trate on the causes of mental ill- ness giving special attention to Michigan's mental health needs and problems. The three have previously worked as a reasearch team at the University of Chicago. Each man an expert in a diff- erent field, they will do compre- hensive research from various approaches. Dr. Miller has been chairman of the psychology de- partment at the University of Chicago since 1951. The Regents appoihted him a professor of psychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry. Fellowship Sets Lane Hall Speech Michigan Christian Fellowship is sponsoring a talk by Prof. Gor- don Van Wylen on "Life at Col- lege" at 4 p.m. today at Lane Hall. Freshmen have been especially invited. Dr. Gerard, on the University of Chicago faculty since 1927, was appointed professor of neurophys- iology in the Department of Psy- chiatry and R a p o p o rt was appointed associate professor of mathematical biology in the De- partment of Psychiatry, Rapoport was on the University of Chicago faculty from 1947 to 1954 when he became a member of the Ford Foundation Behavior- al Sciences at Stanford Univers- ity. ovrtedsoslpolm TORONTO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Sir Ernest MacMillan, Conductor ...... Wednesday,' February ARTUR RUBENSTEIN, Pianist.............. Thursday, Marc 22 h 11 Eminent Artist VIRTUOSI DI ROMA Italy's Best WALTER GIESEKING, Outstanding Artist .1. .. .s....... . .... . Tuesday, Pianist ........... Monday, March 13 March 19 SEASON TICKETS: $17.00, $14.00, $12.00, $10.00 SINGLE: $3.50, $3.00, $2.50, $2.00, $1.50 EXTRA CONCERT SERIES OBERNKIRCHEN CHILDREN'S CHOIR M" 1 '-" THKE MEDICAL BOOK CE Edith Moller, Conductor ................. Monday, PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA OF LONDON October Herbert von Karajan, Conductor ....... Wednesday, November BOSTON POPS TOUR ORCHESTRA Arthur Fiedler, Conductor .............. Sunday, January 8 MYRA HESS Pianist ........ .... Wednesday, Feb Distinguished British Artist TERESA STICH-RANDALL, Soprano .......... Friday, American Who Conquered Europe ruary 15 March 9 You will find our store spec- ially equipped to supply you with Medical and Dental Books and Supplies. TER .4. SEASON TICKETS: SINGLE TICKETS: $8.50, $7.00, $6.00, $5.00 $3.50, $3.00, $2.50, $2.00, $1.50 All concerts will be held in Hill Auditorium, and will begin at 8:30 P.M., unless otherwise indicated. I I I® I III 11