y SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1956 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN f (Continued from Page 4) Christmas Holidays. While the Uni- versity offices and departments will be open on the Mondays before Christmas and New Year's Day, staff members will have the option of selecting one of the two Mondays as an additional holiday. Those staff members who se- lect the Monday before Christmas as a holiday will work the Monday before New Year's, and, conversely, those who work on the, Monday before Christmas will have the Monday before New Year's as a holiday. Graduation Exercises for students who complete their degree requirements at the end of the first semester of the 1956-57 school year will be held Sat., Jan. 26, 1957, at 2:00 p.m. in Hill Audi-I torium. Applications for Fellowships and scholarships in the graduate school for 1957-58 are now available. Applications! for renewal should also be filed at this time. Competition closes Feb. 15, 1957. Blanks and information may be ob- tained in the Graduate School offices. Rackham Building. Only students who intend to enroll in the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies for 1957-58 may apply. Fellowship Applications are, now available for the Margaret Kraus Rams-' dell Award. This Fellowship is used to assist students ,of the University of Michigan in pursuing graduate studies in this country or abroad, in religious education or in preparation for the Christian ministry. Both men and wo- men may apply for this fellowship. Ap- plications should be made to the Dean of the Graduate School, on forms ob- tainable from the Graduate School. The deadline is March 15, 1957. Agenda, Student Government Council Dec. 5, 1956. Minutes of previous meeting. Officers reports: President: Galens mo- tion. Vice President: Evaluation commit- tee-Appointment of student mem- bers, Announcement of faculty mem- bers. Student Representation. Activities:Dec. 15, Barristers Society, Wig and Robe dance, Union Ballroom Old Business: Sigma Kappa. New Business. Members and constituents time. Adjournment. Lectures Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures: "Greek Architecture in Ancient Italy," by Professor William B. Dinsmoor of Columbia University. Aud. B, Angell Hall, 4:15 p.m. University Lecture: Gustave Reese, Adjunct Professor of Music in the Graduate School of New York Univer- sity and head of publication depart- ment of Carl Fischer, Inc., 4:15 p.m., today in the Rackham Amphitheater.I "The Polyphonic Magnificat Before 1600." Open to the general public. E George C. Miles of The American Nu- mismatic Society will deliver a pub- lic lecture on "An Archaeological Re- connaissance in Crete," illustrated with slides, Thurs., Dec. 6, 4:15 p.m., Aud. B, Angell Hall. Co-sponsored by the Depts. of Fine Arts and Near Eastern Studies. Phi Sigma lecture, Thurs., Dec. 6, 8:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Dr. Theodore H. Hubbell, director and curator of insects, Museum of Zoology, will speak on "Some Aspects of Zool- ogy in Tropical America". Public in- vtied. Initiation of new members, Rackham Amphitheater, 7:30 p.m. Research Seminar of the Mental Health Research Institute. Dr. Anatol Rapoport, professor of mathematical biology, Mental Health Research In- stitute, will speak on "Quantification of Performance in a Logical Task With Uncertainty" Dec. 6, 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., Conference Room, Children's Psychiat- ric Hospital. Plays Hansel and Gretel will be presented by the Department of Speech and the School of Music at 8 p.m. tonight in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Late- comers will not be seated during the overture. - Academic Notices Junior Engineers: Technical work ex- perience in a choice of 21 foreign coun- tries is available during summer vaca- tion through the Institute for Inter- national Education. If interested, ob- tain detailed information and applica- tion blanks from the Engineering Placement Office, Room 347, West En- gineering Building. Sociology Undergraduate Forum: Dr. Evelyn Duvall of Chicago, Illinois, will speak on "Planning for a Successful Marriage" in the Rackham Lecture Hall, Wed., Dec. 5, at 7:00 p.m. Public invited. Mtahematics Colloquium: Wed., Dec. 5, at 4:10 p.m. in Room 3011 A.H. Prof. R. Duncan Luce, of Columbia Univer- sity, will speak on "Probabilistic Theory of Utility". Applied Mathematics Seminar (Math 347) Thurs. Dec. 6 4:00 p.m. Room 247, W. Engineering Bldg. Prof. C. L. Dolph will speak on "Saddle-Point Charac- terization of the Schwinger Variation- al Principle in Exterior Scattering Prob- lems." Refreshments at 3:30 in Room 274, W. Engineering Bldg. Placement Noticeg Personnel Interviews: Representatives from the following will be at the Bureau of Appointments: Mon., Dec. 10 Atomic Energy Commission, Lemont, Ill., work in Washington, D. C. and elsewhere - men with M.S. in Engrg., Chem., and Physics for Jr. Professional Development Program in Nuclear Tech- nology. This is technical and adminis- trative work. Men are also needed with M.A. In BusAd., Management Engrg., Public Administration, International Affairs, Engrg. and Physical Science with an interest in technical manage-E ment courses during graduate work; and men with B.A. in Econ., Engrg., Pol. Science, and Physcial Science for Jr. Management Development Program. Wed., Dec. 12 Mich. Civil Service Commission, work throughout Mich. - men and women with any degree for various positions including those in Administration, So- cial Work, Economics, Statistics, Man- agement, Personnel, etc. Thurs., Dec. 13 City of Detroit, Dept. of Parks and Recreation, Detroit, Mich. - men and women with degree in Recreation Lead- ership or LS&A for Recreation Director. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. Summer Placement The Summer Placement Service will start Dec. 5, 9:00 a.m. to 4:45 p.m., in Room 3-G of the Michigan Union. We will have summer jobs for men and women students in camps, resorts, busi- ness and industry, technical and non- technical. Organization Notices Roger Williams Fellowship, tea and toy repair time, 4-5 p.m., Guild House *' * * Physics Club, meeting, 7:30 p.m., 2038 Randall, speaker: Dr. K. T. Hecht "The Analysis of High Resolution Mol- ecular Spectra." * * 1 Hillel, Cultural Committee meeting, 4:15 p.m., Hillel. Hillel, Religious Committee meeting, 4:15 p.m., Hillel. Hillel, Elementary Hebrew Class, 7:45 p.m., Hillel. * * 4 Lutheran Student Association, Ves- per service and Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m., Chapel. * * * I1 Circolo Italiano, conversation hour, 4:10 p.m., Union Snack Bar, * * * Spring Weekend, special events sub- committee chairmen meeting, 4:15 p.m., Room 3A, Union, * * * Ullr Ski Club, meeting, 7:30 p.m, Union. leaning SEE MINOR REPAIRS: * Trouser cuffs brushed and tacked * Seam-rips repaired * Buttons replaced RENTAL SERVICE merbund & studs. ve always wanted it done" Cleaners William EARN YOUR MASTER'S DEGREE AND PREPARE FOR AN EXECUTIVE CAREER IN RETAILING I"nmprehensive nine-month program for A.B. and B.S. graduates; emphasis on executive direction in major stores dovetailed wpith classroom work. 'Total pay for store work $450. Co-ed. Scholarship. Selective job place- ment before graduation. G.1. .approved. Next class, september 3, 1957. Apply now. WRITE FOR BULLETIN C. SCHOOL OF RETAILING UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH Pttsbwuh 13, Pa. _ MiM :1I J M F ) tr I Ofdb pil- II Mrs. Budda's December PACE MAGAZINE t SAC Bombers Can Hit Any Red Target By The Associated Press In the opinion of many high officials, the unstable chain of events in the Soviet satellites and the drastically altered positions of big powers in the Middle East have combined to make the pres- ent world situation more unpre- dictable-and therefore potentially more dangerous-than at any time since the end of World War II. Complicating the picture even further is a possible power straggle within the Kremlin. These circumstances bring the possibility of a general war - which always has lurked in the background during the decade- long postwar competition between' East and West - uncomfortably closer to the foreground. The factor which generally is regarded as doing more than any- thing else to insure that global warfare does not cross the line from dire possibility to horrible reality is the U.S. Strategic Air Command and the hydrogen bombs with which its planes are armed. Operating from domestic and overseas bases, SAC bombers could approach continental Russia from many different angles-as the ac- companying map shows. Capabilities Demonstrated In a demonstration of its inter- continental capability, the Air Force last week sent up a group of B52s for non-stop flights of from 13,500 to 17,000 miles. The planes flew continually for up to 31 hours. They were refueled in the air, but the Air Force refused on security grounds to say how many times. The B52, powered by eight jet engines and capable of over 6,000 miles without refueling, now is, rolling off production lines regu- 1 larly. Two of SAC's 11 heavy bomber wings have been equipped with these advanced aircraft. A third heavy wing is scheduled to discard its long range but rela- tively slow B36s within a few weeks. There are 45 planes in each B52 wing. The Strategic Air Command operates from 37 bases in the con- tinental United States and a vari- able number overseas. The Air Force is now in the process of increasing the number of its domestic bases, to achieve greater dispersion. The plan is to have no more than one wing on each base and in some cases to spread a single wing among two or more bases. Overseas, the extensive foreign bases system permits planning for strikes at Russia from nearly every point of the compass. Funds Sought .yRed Cross Washtenaw County Chapter of the American Red Cross launched a campaign yesterday to raise $4,200 for Hungarian relief, ac- cording to Lawrence Ouimet, chapter chairman. The campaign is part of a Na- tional Red Cross effort to obtain five million dollars for relief aid to the war-torn country. Presi- dent Eisenhower has given his support to this disaster appeal. Red Cross assistance began at once to help save lives in Hungary, Ouimet pointed out. There are now over 100,000 refugees in Red Cross camps in Austria with an additional 5,000 in Germany. The bases would also enable B52s based in the United States to go for any target in the Soviet Union, because tanker planes could give the bombers a fresh fuel sup- ply just before they disappeared over the Soviet void and another shot in the arm as they emerged from thehRussian hinterland on the way home. U.S. System Gives Advantage Any comparison of Soviet and U.S. abilities to hit each other's homelands through the air must take into account these two related factors: the United State's exten- sive base system and its long-per- fected technique of air refueling. The only foreign bases promptly open to Russian use would be in East Asia and the European satel- lites. These bases, however, would not move Russian bombers much closer-if at all-to the continental United States. Since their tankers would have to take off the same distance away from the target as the attacking force, refueling would give the Russians nothing like the advan- tage gained with this system by the United States. FI quality ci On Sale Monday, Dec. 10 m m Individual thorough, expert attention given to each garment I z Aha FR M COMPLETE TUXEDO Tux, shirt, tie, cum "Cleaning the way you hat Gold Bond 515 East I - - "x - I W H1I FI STUDIO 1317 South University EVERYTHING IN HI FI COMPONENTS and KITS Audiophile Net or Catalog Prices Formal Comfort Unequaled Compered with most formal wear, the ease and freedom of our tuxedo offers a welcome contrast in comfort. Our soft construction entirely eliminates the burdensome weight and rigidity of excess padding and canvas stiffening. Available in the pure silk or all wool tropical worsted. from $68,00 H THE QUARRY, Inc. 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