1''AGE T'' Pt) THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y' PAETO_-_IHG N AL AT1.lVVWf1TAUV 6' .r ' x- t.a, -.I L'4a%,,aava ..3! 7 7 r KURSHILDGEN ADVISES: 'U' Offers Counseling On Military Questions II I I I I By MICHAEL KRAFT With the armed forces under- going a streamlining process and draft quotas reaching a lower level, the threat of "greetings" from the government is fading in impor- tance to most students. Yet, some two dozen University students were drafted from school during the past semester and numerous others have been on the verge, according to the University's selective service counsellor, J. Wes- ley Kurshildgen of the Office of Registration and Records. policy, Kurshildgen provides ad- Maintaining and "open door" vice and information for students with questions or problems re- garding their draft status. "The problems are many," the counselor said. In one day 40 stu- dents may seek advice. "Then, there are the days when only five or six may stop in. I may spend anywhere from two minutes to two hours with the men, who usually have a variety of questions." Question Status Many of those questions concern a student's status, deferment pol- cies, selective service tests. and how changes in educational status affect selective service status. The office maintains a complete file of the Public Law, Selective Service regulations, and memor- anda from local draft boards. "Actually we have as much or Hungarians Of R isals (Continued from Page 1) off, but we knew there was shoot- ing and people being killed," he said. On November 4, Russian tanks moved into Beszprem. Students threw explosives at the tanks from the dormitory buildings. Several students were imprisoned and later deported. Sixty of them have not been returned, he said. Andrew decided .to leave the country in spite of the pleas of his parents who wanted the whole family to stay together. "In Hun- gary," he said, "all people do is work for no reason, they r -e starv- ing and have patches in their clothes. 'Always Afraid' "We are always afraid," he con- tinued. "One can't tell his thoughts and ideas even to his best friends." Among the other Hungarian students registering for their first day of classes at the English Lan- guage Institute were Joseph Csehi, who carried a 10-year-old letter from Hungary to the United States. By means of this letter he located relatives in Romulus with whom he is now living. Janos Demeter, a lawyer and political economist, holds three doctorates from the University of Budapest. He is living in a resi- dence provided by the Newman Club. Ivan Kovac, a '27-year-old clin- ical psychologist, is holder of the Ann Arbor Rotary Club scholar- ship which will take care of all his maintenance costs. Other Students Among the other rebel students registering for the Institute are Lazlo Binko, a mechanical engi- neer, Ethel Csomos, a teacher, Ga- bor Erdelyi, a Hungarian philoso- pher and Tamas Sebastyan whose brother is in engineering school. All 24 Hungarian students have been supplied with English Lan- guage Institute grants and room and board. Maintenance offers came large- ly from Ann Arbor religious groups and townspeople. James M. Davis, director of the International Center, said coop- eration with the scholarship and maintenance program for the Hungarians was generally very good. U.S. Top Scientiss Meet at Rackham Over 500 representatives of in- dustry, government and educa- 'tion attended a secret-level radar symposium held in the Rackham Building this week. more contact with the local boards as we do with the students," Kurs- hildgen said. The office continually receives requests for information on stu- dents and a Selective Service file is kept on every male student. Primary duties of the military counselor is certification of stu- dents with their draft. boards. Responsible for sending the sec-. and section of the registration "railroad" ticket to the draft boards, the office also handles re- cords of those taking the Selective Service Deferment test and all correspondence w i t h Selective Service boards on matters con- cerning change of status includ- ing marriage, probation, and changes from full to part-time. Should Notify Board "However, every .student en- rolled at the Uniersity is supposed to notify the draft board of his new address within 10 days after arrival on campus," Kurshildgen pointed out. "The purpose of form number two on the registration ticket is merely torelieve the University from writing letters to each board to inform them the student is en- rolled," he said. He recalled that "We keep get- ting students whose time to apply for a student deferment had ex- pired because the notice arrived from home too late." Then they can not get deferment. "A man can be deferred only when he receives his first induc- tion notice. Then he can postpone his military service until the end of the school year if he meets the necessary requirements. Must be Full-Time Student A student wishing to be deferred must be a full time student carry- ing 12 or niore hours, working to- wards a degree and in good aca- demic standing. Selective service tests and satis- factory class standing are the evi- dence that a school submits to the local draft board for its considera- tion of a student's deferment," the counselor pointed out. Stressing the autonomy of the local draft goard, Kurshildgen said "I think it's important to realize that a man's status with Selective Service is as individual and per- sonal as his relationship to his family and academic career." "The board votes on each indi- vidual case according to its own merits, and we often have to dig deeply into a student's personal background to find all the quali- fications to help him," Kurshild- gen said. Whom a board decides to draft depends on its quotas, armed forces requirements, and the world situation. When a board becomes pinched to fill a quota, "then watch the feathers fly," the coun- selor warned. Losh Predicts Coldest Period In February February should be the coldest month of the year, according to Prof. Hazel M. Losh of the .stron- omy department. Prof. Losh explains that this is due to the "lag of the season. The atmosphere acts like a blanket and holds back some of the heat that falls on its surface." For some time after Dec. 21, the shortest day of the year, Prof. Losh says the northern hemisphere is losing more heat at night than can be repiaced by the sun on the shorter-tnan-average days. As long as this rate of heating falls below the rate of cooling, the temperature continues to drop. Prof. Losh also points out the days are growing noticebly longer. By the end of the month the sun will be shining more than 11 hours. IFC Signs 250 Men in Rushing Approximately 250 men have al- ready signed up for spring se- mester fraternity rushing, accord- ing to Lou Kolb, '59, of the Inter- fraternity Council rushing com- mittee. He estimated that 600 men will rush this semester, about the same Phone NO 8-9382. )H20 REAL ESTATE THE BUTTS & SWISHER REALTORS CO . - -Daily-David Arnold LOSE SOMETHING?-Here is one month's accumulation of scarves and gloves lost by students in the central campus area. Caipus Lost and Found Doing Booming Business By RONALD PARK v If there is one thing students can do well, it's to lose things. Not just gloves, scarves and coats, but golf balls, checkbooks, ping pong paddles, knitting yarn and finger nail polish. If these and other articles are lost in the buildings of the cen- tral campus, they soon end up in the lost and found department located at the Information Desk on the second floor of the Ad- ministration Building. The de- partment is open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 8 a.m. to noon Saturdays. Articles are Tagged Here they are tagged as to date turned in and the building in which they were found. If the item is a purse or billfold the owner is immediately notified by phone. Owners of other articles are; notified by postcard if the articleI has identification. According to Grace Park and Martha Lindenschmidt, employees in charge of the Information In Midwes MILWAUKEE (I)-A new atomic reactor plant that may produce electric power more cheaply than3 conventional steam generation is scheduled for construction in the Midwest during the next five years. "This has the real, serious in- ; tent of developing nuclear power ~until it is competitive with power from fossil fuels," said Robert S. Stevenson, president of the Allis- Chalmers Mfg. Co., in a presenta- tion to newsmen yesterday, The plant will be built by Allis-' Chalmers, a pioneer developer of' working reactors. Research and development will be underwritten by an association of utility com- panies in seven Midwestern states. When finished in 1962, the plant will be owned and operated by the Northern States Power Co. Its 60,000-kilowatt capacity will be fed into the connected lines of the cooperating systems. 'UT' To Pr' ese~t Movies on Trvel For the second year, the Uni- versity Oratorical Association will present a series of Burton Holmes Travelogues in Hill Auditorium, opening Feb. 28 and running every T h u r s d a y thereafter through March 28. "Cruise to Rio" will be the first picture. Others are "Kingdom of Sweden," March 7; "Today's Ja- pan," March 14; "Charm of the South," March 21 and "Sunny Portugal," March 28. All showtings wrill be at 8:30 p.m.j, Desk, most students respond tof the postcards in about a week. However, many of the articles contain no identification. These articles are held two months and books without names are held one month. Only 1/3 Claimed Only about one third of the articles lacking identification are claimed. On the other hand, half of the persons inquiring at the desk for lost items find they have not been turned in. Freshmen seem to have the most difficulty in holding onto their possessions, especially dur- ing the registration period. The first thing they lose is their ID cards. They then cannot get their football tickets, a prospect not especially appealing to them. A sudden change in the weath- er, from warm to cold brings a flood of lost clothing such as jackets and coats. "Right now we are doing a booming business in scarves, gloves and headgear," Miss Park com- mented. Few Faculty Owners Few items turned in are owned by the faculty. Either they don't lose many items or they don't put their names on them. Any person who finds and turns in a lost article can claim it if the owner fails to call for the ar- ticle within two months. Other items students lose are pipes, tobacco pouches, jewelry, gym shorts, bermuda shorts, lip- stick, ice skates, and nurse caps. A rainy spell turns up a number of rain coats and umbrellas. Text books and notebooks are lost in a steady flow all during the school year. Some of the lost notebooks invariably contain a term paper or similar items of importance. What is thefmost often lost textbook? The freshman English handbook, of course. s FOR ANN ARBOR WOODS (Washtenaw at Stadium) Models Open Daily 10-8 Phone NO 3-0800 )R- PERSONAL We NEVER close - magazine subecrip- tbons at discount rates. Student Periodical, NO 2-3061 )F127 ROOMMATE WANTED to share mod- ern, furnished 3-room apartment with two girls. Close to campus. NO 8-9690. )F131 CONVERT your double-breasted suit to a new single-breasted model. $15. Double-breasted, $18, or new silk shawl collar, $25. Write to Michaels Tailoring Co., 1425 Broadway, Detroit, Michigan, for free details or phone WOodward 3-5776. )Fi ROOM AND BOARD BOARDERS WANTED -- Call NO 3- 2360. House Manager. )E9 BOARDERS WANTED - Good food, reasonable rates. Call Brad Barr, NO 2-9431. )E10 BOARD at Nakamura Coop House, 807 So. State. 20 meals a week for $9.00 and 4% hours work. Contact Harley Ris- tad, Pres., between 5-6. NO 2-3219. )E11 TWO SPACES remain for women at Friends Center. $250 and four hours work weekly cover room and board. Apply 1416 Hill St. or phone NO 2- 9890. )E8 GOOD ROOMS, good food, for upper- classmen or grad. men. Mr. Wentz, -1319 Hill, NO 2-6422. )E7 CARS FOR RENT MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LLNES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .75 1.87 2.78 3 .90 2.25 3.33 4 1.04 2.60 3.85 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. doily, 11:00 A.M. Saturday Phone NO 2-3241 HELP WANTED WANTED-Assistant in nursery school. M-W-F mornings. Call NO 2-6188. )H81 WANTED-Cab drivers, full or part- time. Apply 113 V. Ashley. Ann Arbor Yellow and Checker Cab Company. BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED TYPIST in thesis, term papers, etc. Work done on electric typewriter. NO 2-7605. )J91 TEACHER of singing and speaking. Mrs. Kenneth N, Westerman, NO 8- 6584. )J47 RE-WEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes re-woven, Let us save your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop, 224 Nickels Arcade, )J2 TYPEWRITER REPAIR & service, pick- up and delivery. Moseley Typewriter Service. 204 N. 4th Ave. NO 3-5888. )J22 CHILD DAY CARE - Licensed home. Northwest location. References. Cal NO 2-0410. )J46 STUDENT MOTHERS - Morning care for children nine months to twenty- four months. Phone NO 8-7797. )J43 WASHINGS-Also ironing separately. Specialize in cotton blouses and washed skirts. Free pick up and deli- very. Phone NO 2-9020. )J23 Buy your typewriter Rent your typewriter And have your typewriter repaired at a typewriter store. 314Soth MORRILL'S 314 South State NOrmandy 3-2481 )J42 USED CARS 1949 PLYMOUTH convertible, radio and heater, completely summerized. $162. Call NO 5-1367. )N89 USED CAR SPECIALS-1954 Chevrolet fordor; radio and heater, powerglide -a real nice car, $745. 1949 Ford V8 tudor, 1 owner, radio and heater, good tires, $165. 1956 Ford tudor, 19,000 miles, real nice, $1395. JIM WHITE, INC. Your Chevrolet Dealer Open 'til 9 P.M. Daily-Sat. 'til 1 P.M. 2 Big Lots-Cor. Washington and First Sts. and Cor. Ashley and Liberty Sts. Phones: NO 2-5000, NO 3-6495, NO 3-3321 )N90 LOST AND FOUND LOST - Cordovan wallet in Union. Identification cards needed., Call NO 5-6373. Reward offered. ) A86 LOST Wednesday-Alpha Delta Pi pin. Reward. NO 2-2539. )A85 FOR RENT WANTED-2 girls to share apt. near campus. NO 3-2342. )C68 TWO ROOM SUITE for two male stu- dents. Sleeping porch and study room. $7 each per week. 1227 So. State. NO 3-1650. )C67 LARGE 3 room apartment. One block from campus. ALSO one man to share apartment with three: same location. Phone NO 2-1443. )C66 APARTMENT in exchange for child care and dinner preparation. NO 2- 9665. )C65 SAM'S STORE 122 East Washington )B205 9 x 12 COTTON RUGS $29.95 Many varieties of colors to choose from SMITH'S FLOOR COVERING 207 E Washington NO 3-5536 Open Monday evening until 8:30 )B186 WASHINGTON & LINCOLN Helped lead to good government, good way of life. Let us help you celebrate with our special cakes and cookies. CAMPBELL & SON BAKERY 219 N. Main Call NO 8-9880 )B211 w SEAHORSES and marine fish are in! Fresh water tropicals, plants, aquar- iums and supplies; hamsters, rag- mops and monkeys. University Aquarium 328 E. Liberty NO 3-0224 Open daily except Thursday )B217 University Electrovoice, Viking, Garrard and the best of the rest. " "Build it yourself" Kits. " "Installment Plan" to fit your needs. " "Audiophile Net" or Catalog Prices 1317 So. University NO 2-9595 )B194 33 PT. RIVER DIAMOND RING for 70% of value. References. R. . Tay- lor, 12 N. Ingalls. )B216 DIAMOND RINGS-Complete selection of wedding rings, bands, birth stone rings and men's diamond rings. 55% off. Direct from factory. We can not be beat. Written guarantee. Money refunded if not satisfied. At NO 2- 2684. }B191 FOR SALE REFRIGERATOR: apt. size, good work- ing condition, $40. Single Bed and mattress; $10. NO 3-1416. )B212 CORTINA French record course. Used very little. $45. Write Box 35-A, Mich- igan Daily. }8215 REBUILT Raleigh English Bike. Mo- torcycle, Australian-built model - 3 months old. Buying car. Write or inquire 2016C Northwood Apts. }B208 H'i-Fl Quality name brand speakers, , amplifiers, kits, turntables, changers, tape recorders Hours: Mon.-Fri: Noon-8 P.M. Saturday: 9-1 P.M. Audio Supply Lab. Showrooms 334 Nickels Arcade (above Bay's Jewelry) NO 2-7767 NO 2-9425 )B208 FOR SALE-Tuxedo and Navy officer uniforms-41 long-very reasonable, NO 2-9165, )B207 ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords -- $7.25; socks, 39e; shorts, 69c; military sup- plies. FOR SALE BALDWI N PIANOS Acrosonic Spinets Used spinets and uprights 508 E William NO 3-3223 )B210 ROOMS FOR RENT SINGLE FOR MAN-campus location, laundry facilities. Call NO 8-7253 aft- er five. )D4 DOUBLE ROOM for men students. Living room and kitchen privileges. $7.50 each, including linens. Call NO 8-9402. )D4t BASEMENT BEDROOM and sitting room, for two. Fireplace, private en- trance. Need car. NO 2-6008. )D44 CAMPUS ROOMS for men. Refrigerator available. New beds. 1019 Church St. Call NO 3-4257 or HU 2-7678, )D39 CLEAN SINGLE and double rooms for men students near campus. Call NO 3-2242 after 4. )D43 ? OF A DOUBLE ROOM for $6.50 a week. Als oa double room, $6.50. Call NO 8-9720. )x46 ROOMS for male students. ablock from campus. One double and one half double room available. 723 Oak- land, NO 3-3792. )D45 SINGLE ROOM for male student. One block from Law School. 808 Oakland. NO 2-2858.. )D44 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORiES For the Best in Tires, Batteries, and Service see "HOB" GAINSLEY SERVICE So. University & Forest )54, 1, Read Daily C lass ifieds * AVIS RENT-A-CAR or VAN for local or long distance use. Reasonable. Daily, weekly or hourly rates. Nye Motor Sales, Inc., 514 E. Washington St. NO 3-4156. 1 Held Over through Saturday I AA I ' 1111 1 I Y'V!I III iM III p a DIAL NO 2-3136 RODGERS' AND HAMMERSTEIN'S LATE SHOW Comlte! TONIGHT * P.M. I N COLOR AN D CINEMASCOPE Starting 'hComing SUNDAY SUNDAY RESCUED FROM HER eePRISON" t" HOME, TO :."",:.. . ..,,r e! mw 3 i riu r ' '7Ya Y aC , ? i y " c" : ., .. , . r . M .'s _ ,a 1 TODAY AND SUNDAY | SHOWING FROM 1 :30 1 FROM AFRICAN JUNGLES .. . TO CUBAN WATER-FRONTSI 1 U taK ;: ,. I CLUWDE ooy g ~.e.icMERVYN LeROY FRIDAY "LIFE AND MUSIC OF VERDI" a I 1 i I . ._ a Arranged by Project Michigan, number rushing at this time last the University's classified govern- year. ment study of the problems of ( Registration for rushing, now battle area surveillance, the sym- in progress, will continue until posium was jointly sponsored by Feb. 20 in Rm. 1020 Administra- the Army, Navy and Air Force. j tion Bldg. Saturday at 7:00 and 9:00 * ANC NG Sunday at 8 O only Friday and Saturday Nights S Freddie Bentz and the Rainbow ComboX Don Baiey-- Your singing host r A. 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