',su THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 6, 1951 SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 6, 1951 'ANYBODY IN TROUBLE?' Church Stages Campaign To Help Sell Christianity- DETROIT (IP)-An advertising campaign to "sell" Christianity ine much the same way industries peddle cosmetics or automobiles is being prepared by the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan. Through Newspaper advertise- ments prepared by professional advertising men, the Church hopes to profit through the spread of the Christian faith, and~ thereby1 profit those who join a church. The campaign still lacks, how-# Polio Drives Help Patients The March of Dimes has pro- vided nation-wide. leadership in developing new techniques for physical rehabilitation of severely handicapped persons, according to Dr. David Dickinson of the Uni- versity's polio center. Dr. Dickinson spoke at the re- cent kick-off dinner of the Wash- tenaw County March of Dimes. He showed colored slides and re- viewed case histories to indicate the progress made in this field in recent years. Useful Techniques Techniques developed with March of Dimes funds, he said, have helped develop techniques which are useful in treatingthose stricken by cerebral palsy, muscu- lar dystrophy, paraplegia from broken backs or necks, and severe arthritis. According to Dr. Dickinson, the University Hospital respirator cen- ter has been full since its opening in 1951. To date, it has helped nearly 150 patients confined to iron lungs to return home. Costs Cut The average medical costs for patients have been cut from more than $30 per day to an average of about $2.50 a day. He emphasized the need for young adults to secure a full series of three salk vaccine shots. "Polio hits adults even harder than it does .children," Dickinson said. This year's March of Dimes drive, which runs through Jan. 31, is shooting for a $46,900 total. ever, what ad agency men call a suitable "copy theme." The Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrich, Bishop of Michigan, says the cam- paign must be aimed at the needs and, problems of all Christian faiths, not merely the Episcopal Church. No High Pressure "We are not out to high pressure people on the Episcopal Church as against other Christian congre- gations," he says. "It would be ridiculous for us to advertise that we have all the answers facing Christian mankind." Much of the campaign, Bishop Emnrich said, would be patterned after one carried out with great success by Christ Episcopal Church in Cincinnati. The Washington, D.C., Diocese now has adopted the idea, and Episcopal leaders there will test the theory that churches, like business firms, can profit by pro- fessionally prepared ads. The weekly . series of two-column ads is prepared by Episcopal laymen who are advertising men in private life. For Those With Problems All are addressed primarily to people who are not attached to any church but who find them- selves troubled with crises or prob- lems in their lives. One ad, for example, is headed: "Anybody in Trouble? Let God have a try." It carried this text: "So often trouble turns a per- son inward on himself, only aggra- vatingnthe worry. Don't try to go it alone. There is a trustworthy friend who can help you solve your problems. Your minister can bring you the guidance of God's wisdom and love." Always Welcome Each advertisement in the series features a different Episcopal parish church, and each concludes with the assurance that "you're always welcome in an Episcopal Church." "Are you alone in the city?" asked one advertisement. "The biggest crowds can be the loneliest places. So can bars, taverns and cocktail lounges. The Episcopal >church can show you the most satisfying way never to feel alone again. i i i "t ~and' .A ... .. IPower generaingaclitis I Wok onpowe faclitis jare now 50, per cent complete. and seaway lock proceed- g... 'lL'i Transmission of el1ectricity ing o scheulewill start in 1958. lake:f. . .DihtD : O Are shwnon etale - -.r s"Ivr~ NQ~ tok t Toone-third complete. Grass Rive 'Loctabt oefut ~~A / N6 2 T&7 F :::........................... ..fnihed.So.d.b.r ad -. . . .... .... .... ... EAP Newsfeatures Hillel, Yiddish Class, 10 a.m., Hillel. Per and Program, 6 p.m., Lutheran S* Student Center. Hillel, Supper Club, 10 a.m., Hillel. HlelChrsletn,:3pm, * * Main Chapel, Hillel. Congregational and Disciples Student Unitarian. Student Group, Meeting, Guild, Meeting, 7 p.m., Congregational 7 p.m., First Unitarian Church, Speak- Church, Speaers: Sue Gillespie and er, Dr. Hunter, "Current Research on Bob Bates, "H~ow Far Is It To India." Cancer." Graduate Outing Club, Hike and Michigan Christian Fellowship, Supper, 2 p.m., Rackham. Meeting, 4 p.m., Lane Hall, Speaker: Rev. Donald MacLennan, "Abidinguin Deutscher Verein, Meeting, 7.30 p.m., Christ." Tuesday, Room 3G, Union. & Contemporary Literature Club, Or. Lutheran Student Association, Sup- ganizational Meeting, 4:10 pm. Read Daily Classifieds FIRST SEMESTER EXAMENATION SCHEDULE EXAMINATION SCHEDULE COLLEGE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS HORACE H. RACKHAM SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SCHOOL OF NATURAL RESOURCES SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING COLLEGE OF PHARMACY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SCHOOL OF NURSING SCHOOL OF MUSIC Janary 18 to Jarnuary 29, 1956 For courses having both lectures and recitations the "time of class" is the time of the first lecture period of the week. For courses having recitatior only, the "time of class" is the time of the first recitation period. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. Courses not included in either the regular schedule or the special periods may use any examination period provided there is no conflict or provided that, in case of a conflict, the con- flict is resolved by the class which conflicts with the regular schedule. Each student should receive notification from his instruc- tor as to the time and place of his examination. REGULAR SCHEDULE "=x 4 I One Fourth of St. Lawrence Seaway i i ti j WASHINGTON (P) - The St. Lawrence seaway, one of the 20th century's great construction pro- jects, stands today 25 per cent completed. Starting ,from scratch less than 20 months ago, a turbulent section of the mighty St. Lawrence River has been tamed to the extent that vast hydroelectric and navigational benefits will soon be available. The seaway, fulfillment of a 50- year dream, will enable about 75 per cent of the world's shipping to travel from the Atlantic through the St. Lawrence to ports on the Great Lakes. Cost-One Billion Altogether, the seaway and the related project of developing the 2,200,000 horsepower hydroelectric potential of the river's Interna- tional Rapids section - by New York State and Ontario - will cost one billion dollars, give or take a few millions. And, in anticipation of the eco- nomic benefits that seaway plan- ners say will flow to cities and villages along the river and the Great Lakes, many more millions will be spent by local interests in this country and Canada to im- prove harbor and port facilities. Additionally, the federal govern- ment - through Congress - has committed itself to the spending of another 125 million dollars to improve and deepen connecting channels in the Great Lakes. Ultimate Goal Such work will permit vesselsE up to 25,000 tons to travel2,3421 miles from the Atlantic to the head of Lake Superior, 602 feet. above sea level, That is the ulti- mate seaway goal. The immediate goal is to get ships of that size - and smaller through to Lake Erie and such river and lake ports as Ogdens- burg, Oswego, Rochester and Buf- falo, N. Y., Toronto and Hamilton, Ont., and Cleveland and Toledo, Ohio, to mention a few. Nature, in forging the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence system, did a virtually perfect job - with one exception. That's the reason for the seaway and the expenditure of over a billion dollars. Nature's Bottleneck In fashioning the St. Lawrence, as far as deep-draft ocean-going shipping is concerned nature left a "hard core" 114-mile bottleneck between Ogdensburg and Montreal in the form of rushing rapids and rock crusted shoals. Canada, more than 50 years ago, eased the shipping bottleneck, somewhat by constructing a 14- foot-deep canal system that skirts the rapids. But only the smaller ships can traverse the canals. Canada also constructed the Wel- land Canal, which enables ships to pass between Lakes Ontario and Erie, and built the Soulanges and Lachine locks, just above Mon- treal. Thescapacity of these last installations is being greatly in- creased, The seaway, with an average depth of 27 feet, will eliminate the long stretch of shallows in the International Rapids section. Only the largest ocean liners and freighters will be denied access to the river above Montreal. 1959 Deadline Completion of the joint U.S.- Canadian project is scheduled for the spring of 1959. Transmission of electricity from the huge pow- erhouses near Massena, N. Y., will start sometime in the late summer or fall of 1958. The power project will yield about 13 billion kilowatt hours a year, to be divided equally be- tween New York state and the Province of Ontario. The huge output, made possible by the 90-foot falling of 110 mil- lion gallons of water each minute in the International Rapids sec- tion, is exceeded in North America only by the Grand Coulee dam. Power engineers estimate their project is now about 50 per cent complete. Work on this phase of the dual development began sev- Completed eral months prior to the start of seaway construction. U.S. Projects Major seaway work delegated to the United States is the digging of a 10-mile shipping canal - the Long Sault - a few miles north- east of Massena, N. Y., and con- struction of two mammoth locks -one about midway in the canal and the other at its eastern end. The canal and its locks will en- able shipping to by-pass the power projects 2,950-foot spillway dam. The locks, one named in honor of President Eisenhower, will cost in the neighborhood of 20 million dollars each. The other is the Grass River Lock. Each is 800 feet long, 80 feet wide and 30 feet deep. Ahead of Schedule The St. Lawrence Seaway Devel- opment Corp., the agency created by Congress to construct and ad- minister the U.S. section of the seaway, estimates the Eisenhower lock is about one-third complete, and' Grass 'River about 25 per cent. Each, however, is ahead of schedule. More than 200,000 cubic yards of cement have already been poured into the walls of each lock. Excavation and dike em- bankment of the Long Sault canal is around 40 per cent complete. & Time of Class Time of Examination MONDAY TUESDAY (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 Monday, January 21 Thursday, January 24 Saturday, January 26 Friday, January 18 Saturday, January 19 Saturday, January 19 Tuesday, January 29 Tuesday. January 22 Wednesday, January 23 Friday, January 25 Monday, January 28 Saturday, January 19 Tuesday, January 29 Tuesday, January 22 Monday. Jknuary 28 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2-5 2-5 9-12 2-5 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2-5 9-12 2-5 t DAILY. OFFICIAL BULLETIN l!, (Continued on Page 4) gree of Doctor of Musical Arts (in Performance). Race studies with Jo- seph Brinkman and Benning Dexter, and his program of compositions byt Schubert, Bach and Ravel will be opent to the general public.1 Academic Notices Attention February Graduates: Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the3 Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health, and School of Business Administration- students are advised not to request grades of I or X in, February. When such grades are absolutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your instructor to report the make-up grade not later than 8:30 a.m., Monday, Feb. 4, 1957. Grades received awter that time may defer the stu- dent's graduation until a later date. Recommendations for Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recomment tentative February graduates from the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Education for departmental honors (or high honors in the College of L.S.&A.) should recommend such students in a letter sent to the Of- fice of Registration and Records, Room 1513 Administration Building, by 8:30 a.m. Mon., Feb. 4, 1957. Operations Research Seminar: Joseph McCloskey, Case Institute -of Tech- nology, will lecture on "Training for Operations Research" on Wed., Jan. 9. Coffee hour at 3:30 in Room 243, West Engineering Building and seminar in Room 229, West Engineering Building at 4:00 p.m. All faculty members wel- come. Doctoral., Examination for Tony Brouwer, Economics: thesis: "The Limitation of the Work Week: An Analysis of its Rationale, Enforce- ment, and Economic Effects," Mon., Jan. 7, 105 Economic Building, at 4:00 p.m Chairman, William Haber. Doctoral Examination for Chih Kang Wu, Education: thesis: "The Influ- ence of the Y.M.C.A. on the Develop- ment of Physical Education in China," Mon., Jan. 7, East Council Room, Rack- ham Building, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, E. D. Mitchell. Doctoral Examination for Frank L. Schick, Library Science; thesis: "The Paperbound Book in America. The History of Paperbacks and Their Eu- ropean Antecedents," Tues., Jan. 8, East Council Room, Rackham Build- ing, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, R. H. Gjelsness. Coming Events Science Research Club, Jan. meeting. in the Auditorium, Mortimer E. Cooley Building, North Campus at 7:30 pm., Program: "Electronic Factors in De- termining Properties of Molecules," Milton Tamres-Chemistry; "The Ford Nuclear Reactor," Henry J. Gomberg and Ardath H. Emmons-Nuclear En- gineering and Phoenix Project. The last paper will be followed by a tour of inspection of the Ford Nuclear Re- actor. Dues for 1956-57 accepted after 7:10 p.m. Placement Notices The following schools will be at the Bureau of Appointments, on Wed., Jan. 9 to inter-view for teachers. Port Leyden, New York - Speech Correction; English, Mathematics. St. Clair Shores, Michigan (Lakeview School) -- All elementary for Feb., 1957 and Sept., 1957; Elem. Art; Elem. Tea- cher Consultant for Physically Handi- capped. For additional information and ap- pointments contact the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Rdministration Build- ing, NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. SPECIAL PERIODS LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS i ,I 7 -I Botany 2 Chemistry 1, 3, 5E, 15, 23, 182, 183 Economics 71 Economics 72 Economics 51, 52, 53, 54, 101, 153 English 1, 2 French 1, 2, 11, 12, 21, 31, 32, 61, 62 German 1, 2, 31 Latin 21 Political Science 1 Psychology 31, 190, 235 Russian 1 Sociology 1, 60, 101 Spanish 1, 2, 21, 31, 32 Naval Science 101, 201, 301, 301M, 3015, 401, 401M, 401S Friday, January 18 Friday, January 18 Tuesday, January 22 Tuesday, January 29 Tuesday, January 22 Monday, January 21. Thursday, January 24 Saturday, January 26 Thursday, January 24 Monday, January 28 Friday, January 25 Thursday, January 24 Wednesday, January 23 Saturday, January 26 2-5 2-5 2-5 9-12 9-12 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 4' HEAR THIS! A Thursday. January 24 1-10 p.M. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION i' Bus. Ad. 11 Bus. Ad. 12 Tuesday, January 22 Tuesday. January 29 2-5 9-12 RENEW YOUR SUBSCRIPTION to THE DAILY NOW ! COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING ,4 A. E. 1, secs. 1, 3 A. E. 130 C. E. 20, 21, 151 C. E. 22 C. E. 23 C. E. 70 Drawing 1, 3 Drawing 1s, 2 Drawing lx E. E. 5 E. M. 1 E. M. 2 Eiglish 10, 11 I. E. 100, 110 M. E. 2 Naval Science 101, 201, 301, 301M, 3015, 401,'401M, 401S Physics 53 Thursday, January 24 Wednesday, January 23 Monday, January 21 Thursday, January 24 Friday, January 25 Saturday, January 26 Friday, January 25 Saturday, January 26 Thursday, January 24 Friday, January 18 Friday, January 18 Wednesday, January 23 Monday, January 21 Monday, January 21 Friday, January 25 2-5 2-51 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 . +d '. of fi I to' c ser1 yoN f MAIN OFFICEI 101-107 S. Main St. ees o NICKELS ARCADE 330 S. State Street * NEAR 'ENGINE ARCH' 1108 South University a PACKARD-BROCKMAN 1923 Packard * WH ITMORE LAKE 9571 N. Main St. BUYING A CAR? Then you'll want to investigate on Ann Arbor Bank automotive loan. At Ann Arbor Bank, you'll find in rocLr.cc .k . - in,., - 4- .just Thursday, January 24 7-10 p.m. Friday, January 18 2-5 $4 SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS No date of examination may be changed without the con- sent of the Committee on Examination Schedules. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING No date of examination may be changed without the con- sent of the Classification Committee. All cases of conflicts be- tween assigned examination periods must be reported for adjust- ment. See bulletin board outside Room 301 W.E. between Decem- ber 10 and 21 for instructions. SCHOOL OF MUSIC Individual examinations will be given for all applied music courses (individual instruction) elected for credit in any unit of the University. For time and place of examinations, see bulle- A ......... FOR THE REST OF THE SCHOOL YEAR I 1 I