TFRMAY. MARCHI29, 1957 TIME MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE a ara} n a .. NAKAMURA: Co-op Serves 'Do-It-Yourself' Meals By JOHN WEICHER A number of students at Naka- 4 mura House treat the problem of cooking for large groups in a novel i way.. Th students are residents of ., one of the eight co-operative houses on campus. They cook their. own meals and do all the work at the house to keep expenses down.. One chief cook is responsible for "" each of the 20 weekly meals. (No: supper is served on Sunday.) .He; gets to work about four hours be-: fore serving time; cooking for 55. people takes a while. Completely in charge of meal production, he has one assistant who starts to help much later, do- ing such chores as setting the table.::f 9 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Food Budget Low Dinner is the big meal at Naka- mura..The residents feel that it's better to have one big, good meal and two lighter ones than three which are medium-sized and unap- petizing. This plan also helps keep the food budget under ten dollars a week per man. Dishwashing is handled by two other students, who often do this two or three times a week to fulfill their work quota. A central Inter-Purchasing Fund supplies canned goods to all the co-ops. Nakamura House buys its meat and dairy products from a Prof. Meyer To Talk Today A look into "Prospects for the Middle Eastern Economy" will be presented at 4:15 p.m. today by Prof. A. J. Meyer of Harvard Uni- versity. The speech, under the auspices of the Near Eastern Studies de- partment will be held in Auditor- ium C, Angell Hall. According to Prof. William D. Schorger of the anthropology and near eastern studies departments, with "the immediate economic Prof. Meyer's speech will deal prospects in the Near East, the ef-- feet of current aid and national economic programs." Prof. Meyer, Prof. Schorger said, has served for over seven years in United Nations development pro- grams and is at present adminis- tering a survey of Pakistani eco- nomic development for Harvard University and a private survey on economic conditions in Cyprus. German Contest Winners Disclosed The German department recent- ly announced the winners of the Kothe-Hildner Competition for German students. The first and second prizes of $45 and $30 were awarded to Dan Slobin, '60, and William Denison, '58, according to Prof. Henry Nordmeyer of the German depart- ment. -Daily-Leonard Cyr SUPPER-Cooking is one of the work activities of Nakamura House residents. One man is responsible for each meal, and both plans and prepares it. local farmer, as do most of the other houses. Each roomer and boarder at the house is responsible for about five hours of work per week. Because "Nak" House is the largest in the co-op system, work quotas are low- er than in some of the other houses. The work program often scares people away from joining co-ops, but members have found the sys- tem works very well, once you get used to it. "You can only study so many hours a day," House Presi- dent Harley Ristad, '57E, said. Working, he feels, simply puts to good use time that would normally be wasted. Strive For Self-Sufficiency The men living at the house try to be as self-sufficient as possible. All minor troubles are taken care of by whoever happens to know something about the particular field. More extensive repairs are handled by outside firms, but only after making sure the job is being done as inexpensively as possible. Nakamura House is quietly proud of its large number of for- eign students, as are the other houses. These students, on limited budgets, have found no cheaper way of living at the University. These students also provide evi- dence of the long-standing co- operative policy of admitting stu- dents in the order in which they apply, without regard to other cri- teria. The Inter-Cooperative Coun- cil publishes a pamphlet called "Democracy in Action," which the house members take for granted. They don't express it in the same terms, however. "We have something here we like," is the general feeling about life in Naka- mura House. "We always manage to find enough people who agree with us to keep going and keep expanding." The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Adminsitration Building, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 195 VOL. LXVII, NO. 128 General Notices Automobile Regulations: Spring Re- cess: The automobile regulations will be lifted Saturday noon, April 6, and will'become effective again at 8:00 a.m. Monday, April 15, 1957. The Fifth Annual Institute for Draft- ing Teachers and the Fifth Annual In- stitute for Machine Shop Teachers will be held jointly on March 30 at the Rackham Building. Theamorning session ffil begin with coffee and registration at 8:15 in the Assembly Hall, with lun- eheon at 12:10 in the Ballroom of Mi- chigan League; the afternoon session begins at 1:10 with a general meeting in the Amphitheatre and section meet- ings for drafting teachers in the Assem- bly Hall, and machine shop teachers in the Amphitheatre, at 2:15 p.m. Coffee: At Lane Hall. Friday, March 29, with The Office of Religious Af- fairs. 4:15-5:30. Astronomy Department Visitors' Night Friday, March 29 8 p.m., Rm. 2003 An- gel Hall. Dr. Freeman D. Miller will speak on "The Nature of Comets." After the lecture the Student observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be open for inspection and for telescopic observations of the Orion nebula, dou- ble stars and Jupiter. Children wel- comed, but must be accompanied by adults. Student Government Council: Sum- mary of Action Taken March 27, 1957: Approved minutes of previous meet- ing. Approved interim action: March 22 International Students' Assoc., dance, League Approved; March 30, 31, Indian Students' Association, request for per- mission to sponsor movie. Denied due to conflict with Cinema Guild show- ings. Received report of results of campus elections. J-Hop recount pending. Received acknowledgement from Na- tional Sigma Kappa of notification of action taken February 13. Received notification from NSA of appointment of Eugene Hartwig as Con- gress Coordinator. Accepted: Bid for the M-Handbook from Edwards Bros., 12,000 copies, ex- cluding cover, $2142.23. Authorized following distribution of profits from Homecoming Dance: $500 toward J-Hop deficit; $457.25 held in reserve for Central Pep Rally Commit- tee pending report of plans. Granted request of Phi Mu Colony for recognition as a chapter of Phi Mu National Sorority. Granted Recognition to a student chapter of the Student National Edu- cation Assoc. Authorized change of name from the Jazz Club to Culture Club. Approved motion to sen. a delega- tion to the Mock United Nations As- sembly at the University of Wisconsin April 5-7. Tabled a motion to organize a cul- tural and educational delegation to visit Southeast Asia for the summer of 1958. Heard report on North Campus bus problem. Adopted priority criteria and poli- cy for calendaring of student sponsored activities. Upon request of the Senior Board delegated the following activities: Sen- ior announcements, caps and gowns, class gift, class dues, student speaker for Commencement, senior class elec- tions, alumni relations, senior activi- ties. Adopted motion to amend SGC By- laws, Art. 1, Section 2 (Election of Offi- cers) to read "The order of election shallbe president, executive vice-presi- dent, administrative vice-president, and treasurer. Adopted motion to provide that com- mittee chairmen for standing commit- tees of SGC be appointed by the ex- ecutive committee with the approval of the Council, committee chairmen need not be members of Student Govern- ment Council. Adopted unanimously a motion ex- pressing opposition to scheduling the return from Christmas vacation for classes on Friday and Saturday, Jan. 3, 4, 1958. Next meeting: Election of officers Friday, March 29, 1957. Lectures Professor A.J. Meyer, Harvard Uni- versity will deliver a public lecture on "Prospects for the Middle Eastern Econ- omy," on Friday, March 29, 4:15 p.m., Aud. C, Angell Hall. Sponsored by the Dept. of Near Eastern Studies. Donald Frey, Associate Director, Sci- entific Research Laboratory, Engineer- ing Staff of the Ford Motor Company will speak in the Rackham Amphithea- ter at 4:15 p..m on Friday, March 29 on "The Search for Substitute and New Industrial Materials." This is the last in a series of lectures concerning Use and Conservation of Raw Materials in Our Economy. Concerts Recital by students in music educa- tion, 8:30 this evening, March 29 in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. The pro- gram is sponsored by the School of Music and the Student Chapter of the Music Educator's National Conference, and will be open to the public. Parti- cipating are Margaret. Eddie, soprano, Robert Stasiuk, tenor; Joanne Smalla, viola; Christina Schnierle, flute, Kay LaDouceur, oboe, Patricia Noffsinger, clarinet, Robert Hause, trombone, Da- vid Bates, trumpet. Jackie Mindlin, French horn; James L. Moore, marimba; Patricia Millette, harpsichord; Kathleen Course, Betty Harris, Lois Goldberg, Jerome Libby, Karen Taylor, James Ed- monds, Mary Ann Crugher, Ruth Nagel, Jane Hirschmann, and Nelita True, pi- anists. Student Recital: William Donahue, clarinetist, assisted by Camila Dopp- mann, cellist, and Carol Leybourn Ken- ney, pianist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 Sunday evening, March 31, in Aud- itorium A, Angell Hall. Mr. Donahue is a pupil of William Stubbins, and his recital will be open to the general pub- lic. Student Recital. Jackie Mindlin, French horn and James Edmonds, pian- ist, assisted by Irene Kunst, soprano, will be heard in a program at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, March 31, in Audi- torium A, Angell Hall. It will include Mozart"s Horn Concerto No. 1 in Il major, K. 412, Schubert's Auf dem Strom, Op. 119, (for soprano, horn and piano); Stevens' Sonata for Horn and Piano, and Schumann's Adagio and Al- legro, Op. 70. It will be open to the general public. Student Recital: Wesley True, pianist, will perform works by Galuppi, Beetho- ven, Chopin, and Dello Joio at 8:30 Monday evening, April 1, in the Rack- ham Assembly Hall in partial fulfill- ment of the requirements for the de- gree of Master of Music. Mr. True is a pupil of Helen Titus; his recital will be open to the public. Academic Notices Anatomy Seminar in Room 2501 East Medical, March 29, 4 p.m. Coffee will be served one half hour earlier in Room 3502. Norman W. Rieck, Dept. of Ana- tomy: "Investigation of Additional Mo- tor Areas in Occipital Cortex of Maca- ca Mulatta." Mary Jane Showers, Dept. of Anatomy: "Patterns of Movement Elicited by Stimulation of the Dorsal Medial Nucleus of the Thalmus." Charles L. Votaw, Dept. of Anatomy: "The Hippocampus as a Supplementary Motor Area." Edgar Schwaibold Senior Prize in Ger- man ($100), awarded annually to a se- nior concentrating in German and cur- rently taking at least one senior course in German literature in an essay com- petition. The contest (one English, one German essay on topics related to course work) will be held Thursday, Ap- ril 4, from 2 to 4 p.m. Students wish- ing to compete should make out appli- cation forms at the German Depart- ment Office by Monday, April 1. Astronomical Colloquium. F r I d a y, March 29, 4:15 p.m., The Observatory. Dr. Robert P. Kraft of Indiana Univer- sity will speak on "The Spectrum of T Coronae Borealis." Biochemistry Colloquium. Dr. Vernon H. Cheldelin, Director of The Science Research Institute, Oregon State Col- lege, in "Pathways of Carbohydrate Me- tabolism." Fri., March 29 at 4 p.m., Nest Medical Building. Everyone inter- ested is invited to attend. Doctoral Examination for Thomas Houser, Chemistry; thesis: "The Kinet- ics of the Thermal Decomposition of Pentachloroethane", Friday, March 29, 3003 Chemistry Building, at 3:15 p.m. Chairman, R. B. Bernstein. Placement Notices Personnel Interviews: Representatives from the following will be at the Engrg. School: Mon., April 1 John Bean Div.. Food Machinery & Chem. Corp., Lansing, Mich. - all lev- els in Mech. for Research, Development, Design, Production and Sales. Fairchild Engine Div., Fairchild En- gine & Airplane Corp., Deer Park, Long Island, New York - all levels in any program interested in the propulsion field for Summer and Regular work. Touche, Niven, Bailey and Smart, De- troit, Mich. - all levels in Ind., or an engrg. degree with a BusAd back- ground, for Management Services. Mon., Tues., April 1 & 2 Northrup Aircraft, Inc., Hawthorne, Calif. - all levels in Aero., Civil, Elect., Ind., Math., ,Mech., Engrg. Mech., or Physicsfor Development and Design. Tues., April 2 Air Force Flight Test Center, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. - all levels in Aero., Ch.E., Elect., Instr., Math., Mech., Nuclear, Physics, or Science for Sum- mer and Regular Research, Develop- ment and Design. t i HA Shell it Co., Toronto, Canada - B.S. or M.S. in Ch.E. for Process and Tech., B.S. or M.S. in Mech or Civil for Engrg. Maintenance and Const. Canadian citi- zens. Guided Missiles Div., Fairchild En- gine & Airplane Corp., Wyandanch, Long Is., N.Y. - all levels in Aero., Elect., Instr., Math., Mech., Engrg. Mech., Physics, Sanit., and Science for Research. Development and Design. For appointments contact the Engrg. Placement Office, 347 W. E., ext. 2182. Personnel Requests: The U. A. Dean Dairy Co., Cleveland Hgts., Ohio, is in need of a qualified Quality Control man to take charge of the products of the plant. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., St. Louis, Mo., has an opening for an Assistant Training Dir. Requires a man with an M.A. or better in Psych.and/or Educ., and some background in Group Development. Maryland State Civil Service an. nounces an opening for an Economist with a PhD. in Econ. and 3 yrs. experi- ence. or with a B.A. and some gradu- ate courses plus 5 yrs. experience. (Continued on Page 4) NO ANDS Fully Automatic "815 2x2 SLIDE PROJECTOR PIZZA * Plenty of Parking Space * Open 'till 12:00 P.M. at eta lineit! Union International Committee Proposed To Aid Integration TASTE THE DIFFERENCE! Specially prepared by chefs with the flavor, tenderness, and zest of native Italy. * PIZZA TO GO * Phone NO 3-1683 . 'I 1 4950 Complete with self-contained two- toned case, extra condenser lens for 1-1/2"x1-1/2" transparencies, cord and 7 magazine trays. By JIM BOW A Union international committee "to provide the means for better integrating foreign students into the University community" was proposed in a report by the Un- ion international sub-committee, recently. The recommendation calls for an International Committee which would be represented on the Un- ion Executive Council and includ- ed in the Union Student Activities Committee structure. The sub-committee report is the1 result of investigation during the past several months into the Un- ion's potential role in integrating foreign students into the student body. "Brother System" Proposed One project proposed for the In- ternational Committee is an "Am- erican brother system" in which foreign students would have the opportunity to learn about Univer- sity life and establish friendships with the American student." Other proposed projects are a booklet explaining "opportunities present. for associtions between foreign and American students," and an activities orientation pro- gram for foreign students. "There are 1200 male foreign students on campus, and the Un- ion has a definite, responsibility to this very significant segment of the student body," the report ex- plained. Consideration in April Don Young, '58, international sub-committee chairman, said that the recommendations "will be con- sidered in April when the new Un- ion officers are elected." Organization NNtices Ann #46or 2eitar 1015 East Ann - Near Women's Dormitories shows 36 slides all by itself! The Wollensak "815" will show your slides at their brilliant best as slow or fast as you like without your slightest attention. 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I I A It',s- a PIPE AND A GOOD ONE, TOO, When purchased from PIP NTER 118 East Huron - Opposite County Bldg. The Episcopal Student Foundation, March 29, 1:00 p.m., Luncheon at Can- terbury House following the 12:10 cele- bration of Holy Communion at the Church.,t m A n Hillel, Services, March 29, 7:30 p.m., Hillel. Speaker: Mr. Moishe Haar,"Sec- ularism., a Westminster Student Fellowship, March 29, 7:45 p.m., Student Center, Lewis Room. Art Party: finger painting, mobile making, soap carving. etc. Wear old clothes. s s s Union Bridge Club, Duplicate Bridge Tournament, March 29, 7:30 p.m., Union "I STOA sCores top markes for flavor! 0 I ':5::: ii::f}>i}... :}j}}:: f3}C : }:iii Vii.. .r"?? :ii...: 1i{:}r .h._: 6N' :. yG :+' ? fi :. __. .. .".......... ...... ..... __.. .__ .. ...._. ._. v . ._..w _ .. .1 . ... r" fif +i k k k by ? !' '$iR"r