PAGE "SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, APRl 17, 195 ..5: r:vrdva: n.^ '', v ,r.::i.}''.s r s { xl' ' i4 " ,".a ... '' .. ;:'f n. . 4S Fri r"- q.- .":rrti ' , . ... ..: rrv'.:". . . .'"^ ...v..:. s..". i .. r ... + ,.r .."r....... J.. 4 ~. .f tt . : n.7 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I ^v ,. v~ - :" r: : v::":: ":: ovv~v:"v -."r-s~r."-"r^-+v:.. . vo. " " :"r ":esv~,^.z.n: r^- m;t: TO BYPASS SUEZ: West Seeks New Mid-East Oil Route Campus Briefs (Continued from Page 4) 1 include surgical and medical services7 should make such changes in the Per- sonnel Office, Room 1020, Admin. Bldg.i New applications and changes will bei effective June 5, with the first payroll deduction on May 31. After April 24,1 no new applications or changes can bee accepted until October, 1957. Selective Service Examination: Stu-f dents taking the Selective Service Col- lege Qualification Test on April 18 are requested to report to Room 130, Busi- ness Administration at 8:30 a.m. Thurs.1 Residence Hall Scholarship: Womeni students wishing to apply for a Resi- dence Hall Scholarship for the aadem- ic year 1957-58 for Helen Newberry Resi-1 dence may do so through the Office of the Dean of Women. Applications close Wed., April 24. Students already living in this residnce hall and those wish- ing to live there next fall may apply.i Qualifications will be considered on thes basis of academic standing (minimum 2.5 cumulative average), need, and contribution to group living. Residence Hall Scholarship: Women students wishing to apply for a Resi- dnce Hall Scholarship for the academ- ic year 1957-58 for Betsy Barbour House may do so through the Office of the; Dean of Women. Applications closes Wed., April 24. Students already liv- ing there next fall may apply. Quali- fications will be considered on the ba- sis of academic standing (minimum 2.5 cumulative average), need, and contri- bution to group living. Life Saving Class-Women Students. Instruction is available for women stu- dents in the Red Cross Senior Life Saving Course. The class meets Mon., Wed., Fri. at 4:20 p.m. in the Women's Pool. Students may register in Office 15, Barbour Gymnasium, or go directly to the Pool on Wed., at 4:20. The film for Wed., April 17 Will be "Tell Tale Heart," a dramatization of Edgar Allen Poe's story with Joseph Schildkraut. 4051 Administration Build- ing, the- Audio-Visual Education Cen- ter Auditorium at 12:30 p.m. Attention all Seniors! Order your caps and gowns for June graduation at Moe's Sport Shop on North University as soon as possible. Lectures Dr. Ralph Bunche Tickets on sale today. Dr. Bunche, Under-Secretary of the UN, will be presented Sat., 8:30 p.m., in Hill Auditorium as the final number on the current Lecture Course. He will speak on, "The UN and World Peace." Tickets are on sale daily at the Auditorium box office, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Military Science Lecture, Prof. Donald F. Drummond, Department of History, "The First World War", Wed., April 17, 7:30 p.m. Aud. C, Angell Hall. Public invited. Sigma Xi, Museum of Paleontology and the Society of the Sigma Xi pre- sent the Ermine Cowles Case Memorial Lecture by Dr. Charles L. Calp, De- partment of Paleontology, University of California. "Interpreting the Fossil Record," April 18, 8:00 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Public invited. Refresh- mnents. Insanity as a Criminal Defense - a Report on Experimental Jury Trials will be given by Visiting Prof. Fred Strodtbeck and Prof. Harry Kalven Jr., from the University of Chicago in Aud. B, Angell Hall at 4:00 p.m. Thurs., April 18. Prof. Edward Devine, Ann Ar- bor City Prosecutor, will preside. Co- sponsored by Sociology Undergraduate Student-Faculty Committee and by the Law School. Concerts Student Recital: Sara Scott, student of piand with Marion Owen, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree at 8:30 p.m. Thurs., April 18, in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. Works by Mozart, Beetho- ven, Schoenberg and Debussy. Open to the general public. Academic Notices College of Architecture and- Design mid-semester reports are due Thurs., April 18. It is only necessary to report "D" and "E's grades. Please send them to 207 Architcture Building not later than Tues., April 23. ..Al students planning to meet the Directed Teaching requirements for the Secondary School Teaching Certificate during the Fall Semester 1957, must file their applications in Room 3206, Uni- versity High School before the end of the present semester. Students who are definitely planning to transfer to the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, School of Edu- cation, School of Music, School ofE Nursing, College of Architecture andV Design, or the College of Pharmacy in June or September from another cam- pus unit should come to the Office ofI Admissions, 1524 Administration Build-v ing immediately to make applicationf for transfer. LSA students planning on doing col- lege work during this summer at other educational institutions should imme- diately file the proper summer courset approval forms. These forms are avail-t able in the Office of Admissions, 15241 Administration Building. May 24 1s the last day for presenting these forms. Applicants for the Joint Program ina Liberal Arts and Medicine: Applicationt for admission to the Joint Program inI Liberal Arts and Medicine must be made before April 22 of the final pre-a professional year. Application may be( made now at 1220 Angell Hall. Operations Research Seminar: Dr.I Wyeth Allen, Chairman of the Depts. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineer- ing will lecture on "Operations Re-o search in Japan" Wed., April 17. Coffee hour in Room 243, West Engineering- at 3:30 and seminar in Room 229, WestE Engineering at 4:00 p.m. All faculty members welcome. Applied Mathematics Seminar Thurs., April 18. 4:00 p.m., Room 246, W. Engi- neering. Prof. John Carr will speak on7 "Generalized Functional Round-off Er-.7 ror Analysis." Refreshments at 3:30 in1 Room 274, W. Engineering. Interdepartmental Seminar on Ap- plied Meteorology: Engineering Thurs., Aprl 18, 4 p.m., Room 307, West Engi-7 neering Bldg. James J. B. Worth willi speak on "Air Conditioning as a Factor in Attaining High Rates of Industrial Production: Personnel Efficiency" - Chairman: Prof. Floyd N. Calhoon. 1 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science, Room 3401, Mason Hall, Thurs., 3:15-4:45 p.m., April 18. C. H. Coombs, "A Revised Theory of Data." Seminar in Mathematical Statistics: Thurs., April 18, in Room 3201, Angell Hall from 4:00-6:00 p.m. Howard Rein- hardt will discuss "Scheffe's 1956 Pa- per on Alternate Models for the Analy- sis of Variance." Coffee at 5:00 in Room 3212, Angell Hall. ..Political Science Graduate Round- table, Thurs., April 18, at 8:00 p.m. Thomas P. Jenkin, professor of Political Science, University of California at Los Angeles, will speak on "The Inter- pretation of Contemporary American Political Thought." Refreshments. Doctoral Examination for Walter Les- lie Meyer, Chemistry; thesis: "1, 5-, Diaryl-2, 3-Pyrrolidinediones and 5- Aryl-3-Arylamino-2 (5H)-Furanones", Thurs., April 18, 2024 Chemistry Build- ing, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, W. R. Vaughan. Placement Notices The following schools have listed va- cancies on their teaching staffs with the Bureau of Appointments for the 1957-58 school year. They will not be here to interview at this time. Big Timber, Montana - English. Caro, Michigan - 5th Grade. Carson City, Michigan - Commercial (shorthand & typing.) Coldwater, Michigan (R. R. 5) -- Teacher for all 8 grades. Des Plaines or Park Ridge, Illinois- English. Grand Rapids, Michigan (Forest Hills Public Schools) - Elementary; Junior High. Harvey, Illinois - Elementary Grades; Speech Therapist; 7th & 8th General Science/Health; Math. Iron Mountain, Michigan - English/ Journalism. Marinette, Wisconsin-Kindergarten; 1st grade; English/Speech/Class Play; English/Spanish/English. Mesick, Michigan - Elementary; Band/Chorus; Physical Education/ Health/plus other academic major. Pigeon, Michigan - English/Library. Reading, Michigan-3rd Grade; Elem. & High School Vocal Music; Girls Phy- sical Education/Math or Social Studies or Commercial. Vermontville, Michigan -- Commer- cial; English. Wheaton, Illinois -- 6th Grade (man). For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad- ministration Building, NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. Personnel Interviews: Representatives from the following will be at the Engrg. School: Mon., Aprl 22 Ohio Boxboard Co., Rittman, Ohio- al levels in Ch.E., Ind., Elect., Mech. and Chemistry for Research, Develop- ment, Design, Production, and Con- struction. Wed., April 24 Container Corp. of America, Chi- cago, Ill.-B.S. and M.S. in Chem. E., E. E., Industrial, Instru., Mech., and Engrg. Mech for Summer and Regular positions. For appointments contact the Engrg. Placement Office, 347 W.E., ext. 2182. E Representatives from the following will be at the Bureau of Appointments: Tues., April 23 City of Detroit, Dept. of Parks and Recreation, Detroit, Mich. - men and women with any degree in Liberal Artsj for Recreation Director. City of Easton, Pa. - men and wq- men with any degree in Liberal Arts for Recreation Program. The Wurzburg Co., Grand Rapids,; Mich. - women with any degree in- terested in Merchandising for Execu- tive Training. Men with majors in Acctg. for Accountant positions. , Wed., April 24' Marine Officer Procurement, to be1 stationed anywhere in world - Men in all fields except Pre-Medical, Pre-Den- tistry, Music, Art and Pre-Theology for Unrestricted Officers in the USMC. The Wm. B. Hoyer Agency of the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance1 Co., Columbus, OhioN-men with any degree for Sales in Northwestern Ohio and four counties in West Va. around1 Wheeling. Thurs., April 25 Marine Officer Procurement - see above.1 The Dow Chem. Co., Midland, Mich. -women with any degree but some commercial training for Secretaries, Stenographers, Typists or Clerk-Typists.7 Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild, Fish-; er Body Div., Public Relations and Ad- vertising Section, Detroit, Mich. - men with degree in LS&A, particular- ly Journalism and Speech, for Public Relations (Public Speaking). Primarily the job is making presentations to jun- ior and senior high school assemblies, with audiences from 100 to 1000 boys. The presentation consists of explain- ing the Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild program, the fundamentals and fu- ture of automobile styling and design, and the showing of a 17-minute color film. Normally, there are two such pre- sentations a day, one in the morning and one in the afternoon. Needham, Louis and Brodby, Inc., (advertising firm) Chicago, Illinois - men in LS&A with emphasis on writ- ing and literature; extra-curricular in- terests, hobbies, attitudes and business objectives for General Advertising Training. Sunbeam Corp., Chicago, Ill. - men with any degree for Sales. Fri., April 26 American Nat'l Red Cross - men and women with degrees in Social Sci- ences, Psych, and Sociology for Case Workers. Degree in Recreation, Phys. Ed., Speeche, Music aild Arts for wo- men recreation workers; Phys. Ed. ma- jor for men, First Aid and Water Safety. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg.,j ext. 3371. Summer Placement: There will be a summer placement meeting today at the Union in room 3-G, from 9 to 4:45. David Weikart of Camp Lawrencej Cory in Rochester, N.Y., will be pres- ent at the Summer Placement meeting this afternoon from 1 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. Camp Cory is in need of a waterfront director, an arts and crafts director and several general counselors. Summer Placement The following representatives will in- terview for summer personnel in Room 30 of the Michigan Union on Wednes- day, April 17th, from 9 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. unless otherwise stated. The H. J. Heinz Co. of Holland, Mich- igan have the following positions open for the summer: Salting House Mgr., Asst. Mgr., Receiving Station Mgr., and produce clerk. Mr. A. E .Hildebrand, manager of the crops dept., will con- duct the interviews. Miss Ruth Rankin of the Midland County Girl Scouts, will interview fe- male applicants for the following po- sitions: Arts and crafts consultant, food supervisor, unit leaders, unit assistants, waterfront dir., asst. waterfront dir., By The Associated Press Western nations and the major international oil companies are, studying dramatic proposals to, bring oil out of the Middle East. without using the Suez Canal and break the stranglehold that Egypt and Syria now have on the flow of. oil from the Mideast to Europe. The Iraq Petroleum Co. (IPC%, owned by British, American, Dutch and French oil interests, has field; men investigating the possibility of building new oil pipelines from Iraq through Turkey to the Med- iterranean. Company officials are expected to meet in London late in March or early in April to study the field reports. Would Bypass Suez The pipelines under considera- tion would bypass both the Suez Canal and Red-tinged Syria. Arab saboteurs blew up the IPC's major pipelines crossing northern Syria last Nov. 3 after the Anglo- French-Israeli invasion of Egypt. The Syrian government has re- fused to alow repairs. Damage to these pipelines and closing of the canal cut off delivery of 85 pc- cent of Western Europe's estimated two million daily barrels of Mideast oil. Although the flow of oil through the Trans-Arabian pipeline which delivers Saudi Arabian oil to the Mediterranean was not disturbed, the rupture of service through the canal and the northern pipelines has been a clear sign to Western Europe that it needs alternate business manager, and a health super- visor (R.N.). Miss Rankin will be pres- ent in the afternoon only. H. M. Woldenberg of Camp Indian- ola, Lake Mendota, Wisconsin, will seek candidates for the following posi- tions: general and specialty counselors, athletic director, waterfront director. There is also an opening on the camp staff for a qualified M.D. Arnet Cole of the Ann Arbor Y.M.C.A. is looking for suitable applicants to fill the positions of waterfront and program director as well as general counselors. Mrs. Spiesman -of the Washtenaw County Girl Scouts has a variety of openings to fill at Camp Cedar Lake. Among the openings one is for a busi- ness manager, one for an R.N. Greenfield Village has announced openings for female tour guides to di- rect visitors through the village and explain the historical exhibits to them. Training in speech or history is desir- able but not required. For further de- tails, attend the Summer Placement Meeting. Applications must be in by April 20th. The Ford Motor Co., in Birmingham, Michigan has an opening in their small technical library for a coed ma- joring in library science. Residents of, Birmingham will be given preference. Mrs. Pickett of Educators Assn. of New York will be present to interview male and female students interested in selling The Volume Library. Em- ployees are assigned a specific terri- tory which may be anywhere in the U.S.A. Salary includes a guaranteed wage plus commission. Mr. Ostrander of Camp Douglas Smith, Ludington, Michigan has open- ings for all types of counselors. Married couples may apply. means of shipment to destroy, the near-monopoly enjoyed by Egypt and Syria. This is the reason for the deter- mined drive to find new routes. Consider Iraq-Turkey Route The Iraq-to-Turkey pipeline projects receiving the most consid- eration are these: 1. A line from the oil fields near Kirkuk in northern Iraq to the seaport of Iskenduren in Turkey. This line would be about 500 miles long and would carry about 500,- 000 barrels of oil a day. The pipe- lines blown up in Syria originate in these fields. 2. A line from the Basra fields on the Persian Gulf to Iskendu- ren, a distance of nearly 1,040 miles. This line would carry 700,000 barrels a day. 3. Two lines from the Basra fields to Iskenduren, with a total daily capacity of 1,200,000 barrels. These proposed lines all would run northwest to the Turkish bord- er and swing left to Iskenduren, skirting the northern border of Syria. Estimates of the cost of building them range from 250 mil- lion dollars for the shorter line to more than 800 million dollars for the double line from Basra. Also under investigation is a pipeline from the oil fields in the sheikdom of Kuwait on the Per- sian Gulf to Iskenduren. There al- so is talk of running a line from fields near Teheran in Iran to the Turkish seaport. Oil company officials believe a pipeline to Turkey -will be more practical than steps already taken to bypass the canal. These are: 1. Orders have gone to free world shipyards for huge new tankers, ranging up to 100,000 tons, which can carry large amounts of oil from Middle East fields to the United States and Europe. Many of them will be above 45,000 tons and too big to use the canal under any circumstances. 2. Israel is laying an 8-inch pipeline from Elath, its port on the Gulf of Aqaba, to Sukraer on its Mediterranean coast. Later, Is- rael, with French help, hopes to build a larger pipeline along the same route. It is expected that tankers will transport oil for these pipelines from the Persian Gulf to Elath. I T e a m Dr. Jerome W. Conn, professor of internal medicine, has been awarded the Claude Bernard med- al from the University of Mon- treal for his work on high blood pressure diseases. Prof. Conn's findings have en- abled doctors to discover and cure a new disease, Conn's Syndrome, associated with high blood pres- sure. Prof. Conn received the award while serving as the annual Claude Bernard visiting profes- sor at the University of Montreal recently. * * * "Les Enfants du Paradis," (the Kids in the Peanut Gallery) will be shown 7 p.m. tonight in the Natural Science Auditorium. Directed by Marcel Carne, the award-winning French film deals with the world of the theater and boulevards in 19th century Paris. The film is being sponsored by Le Cercle Francais. automobile accident March 29, is still listed in critical condition. According to University Hospi- fal authorities Fuger has a head injury, a broken jaw and a frac- tured left arm. The accident took place on U.S. 12, one-tenth of a mile east of Harris Road in Ypsilanti. Prof. WiHCox Gets Fulbright A Fulbright grant for a year at the University of Oxford has been granted to Prof. William B. Will- cox, of the history department, it was announced yesterday. Prof. Willcox will serve as a Fulbright lecturer in military his- tory and tutor English history at Balliol College, University of Ox- ford. The author of several books en English history will also do re- , I saconthe militar history of the American Revolution under a Brenton Godfrey Fuger, Univer- grant from the University's Rack sity student who was injured in an ham Research Grant. k t .ry Organization Notices i 1 11 Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, conver- sation hour, April 17, 3:30-5:30, Union Snack Bar. ** * The Episcopal Student Foundation, April 18, breakfast at Canterbury House following the 7:00 a.m. celebration of Holy Communion at the Church. 4 -* * School of Education Student Coun- cil, meeting, April 17, 4:15, 3529 Student Activities Building. * ,*, Young Democratic Club, meeting, April 17, 7:30 Union. Spring Weekend. Concessions Com- mittee, mass meeting, April 18, 7:00, Room 3-Y, Union. University Choir, members who at- tend the Wednesday (7:00) rehearsal only will be excused from the rehearsal April 17. Bach Choir, Michigan Singers, all membrs meet to rehearse the Beethoven Ninth Symphony, 7:30, April 17, Hill Auditorium. Generation. meeting, April 17, 7:30, Office in Student Publications Build- ing. Michigan Folklore Society, organiza- tional meeting, April 18. 7:30, Union. All those interested in folk singing or history are welcome. PARTY FAVORS for ALL OCCASIONS Ball Office Supply 213 E. Washington Ph. 3-1161 Match or contrast your Easter apparel textured coolness tintable any color!* *small chorg. i . You couldn't step out in anything newer! The elegant strawtexture cwuld be mistaken for broadtoil... but it's cooler, ighter, here wifh ot tee, w cork cushioning, hi or md heel $995 306 SOUTH STATE Open 9:00 to 5:30 and Monday Kite -- ---- - + Last Day to Mail CA ND I E S to give and enjoy for Easter ASSORTED CHOCOLATES . IL LOOKy~U SMR~hT LADIG ~~X~U'~~ LFE F AwAC OFFICER .$f;hic { . ' There's always a sale at BOB MARSHALL'S 1lb. box 135 Decorated MILK CHOCOLATE EGG Chocolate cream center, 50C% Cl 2 lb. box $20 COLORFUL FOIL BASKET Filled with tempting Easter candies, $1W -W1 ~-w:- .'. . . . . . - t. . C} .:,:,:;:ter::, y :#" C C:E;. he ... :;:{~'p o {}; r .Uard :X+" :+.:v':Csumi.:.,$r,. dr es i} o f /Y , +fown ' s;gto-cole9 9 r o eti thit "r at Exc 'n oe9 u tFe e "the Smooth, t les of this taupe uniform ae us sit s ofaita l ou l sttY..wO, k 9side by side w i m ert. offiicr, Y w1str orcarkit h vits.fs responsibility- administrative asgA YCTHp fiesnotatsan r ill ~be yours. AStCACEl nI Al I { S . quality cleaning EASTER CANDY STORE With a dozen different delicious eggs! $100 FRUIT AND NUT EGG Dipped in milk chocolate. $10_oo slo, Shl~fl.OnOus Paris YOU"'hase out. Yes, yU~hv l You've dreamed stows, meeting new --tiran"and Individual thorough, expert attention given to each garment FREE MINOR REPAIRS: " Trouser cuffs brushed e surnw _r d es uilm ousta"ds abaout-touingO historic lan s, n m ri. ojCinY ope.Theresteaccorded an Amerian -oyob The prestige m our trips doubly tny **Pyour pay will maeY lo -40# A 0- am, 44 4' i1 and tacked I E I