THE MIC$IGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1958 ANGE PROGRAM: Harvard Students To Go To Russian Universities , v arvard University has an- need an exchange student pro- n with the Soviet Union next :arshall D. Shulman, associate ctor of the Russian Research ter, recently announced that Inter-University Committee on vel Grants has received foun- on support, to enable it to pay me Talks o Evaluate the travel expenses of about 20 to 30 persons. The Soviet government will pay expenses and tuition for the visi- tors, and will provide them with spending money, if necessary. Last month, the United States and Russia made an "agreement in principle" for the exchange. The Committee program is the first concrete step talen by American universities toward meeting the student-exchange part of the agreement, Shulman said. He said- that the Russians planned to send scholars to the United States next year. Shulman said that those stu- dents who want to go to the So- viet Union must know Russian, but they may be from any field of study. Since the Russians have no fa- cilities for housing married stu- dents, only those men or women who can travel alone will be con- sidered, he added. Other factors which will be considered are the subject of the thesis and its rela- tion to study in the Soviet Union. Lewis Cites Main Points In Teaching Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A. Lewis told members of the Univeirsity branch of the Studeit National Education As- sociation recently that there are three main aspects of teaching preparation. Formerly a superintendent of Dearborn schools, Lewis noted that "tricks of the trade" are taught in courses on methods and by practice teaching. Another facet of teacher pre- paration, he emphasized, is de- veloping an understanding of chil- dren. Lewis said this skill could be acquired only by working as a camp counselor or as a practice teacher. Noting that the third aspect of teacher preparation is knowl- edge of the subject matter the student is preparing to teach, Evelyn Field, '58 Ed., president of the SNEA, was presented with the chapter's charter by visiting Prof. Edgar B. Wesley of the School of Education. DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS iu Iricuil The University Medical School culty is going to take two days June to consider the merits and nitations of itself and its aca- mic program, Dean Albert C. irstenberg announced recently. "As medicine itself forges read, so must the concept of aching medicine," said Dr. urstenberg. The medical school as been at work through curri- lum committees over a number. years, he said. The meeting in June will be i attempt, Dean Furstenberg id, to gather all of the modern eas, as well as let the Univer- y faculty concentrate on these eas for a few days without the terference of classroom and of- e duties. "We will spend two days en- ,ged in a searching investigation our medical curriculum," Dean irstenberg said, "with a definite titude of changing the Univer- y Medical School's academic ogram." Jndergraduate cholarships till Available Three scholarships are still open r undergraduate students this nester, Dean Ivan W. Parker of t scholarship office said. The scholarships and their stip- ations are: 1) Goodyear scholarship open Junior or senior men interested business or industry upon grad- tion.- 2) American Indian scholar- dp. 3) The John and Elizabeth hitely scholarship for students om Ingham County, business or e-business programs. Students interested in the hiolarships should make ap- intments with the scholarship fice, 2011 Student Activities dg., Parker said. Driver Discomfort. FOR RENT MALE STUDENT wanted to share apt. with two others. Call NO 3-6310. )C167 TWO ROOMMATES needed to share four man apartment. Call NO 2-5810 or stop in at 443 8. Division. )C168 EXTRA LARGE room, linens furnished. reasonable. Phone between 1-4, NO 5- ?5304. )C169 ROOMS FOR MALE students: % block from Law Quad. Singles $8.50, Dou- bles $7.00 Includes linens and maid service. Call NO 2-0936. After 5:30, call NO 3-3792. )C164 ONE UNFURNISHED two room apart- ment located on East Jefferson, for Immediate occupancy. To apply you must be married, a member of the faculty, staff, or a student of the Uni- versity of Michigan. Contact Mr. Mel- huish, 1056 Administration Building or phone NO 3-1511, Ext. 2914. )C166 GIRL WANTED to share two room apartment-two blocks from campus. Call NO 5-6940. )C165 FOR RENT: Suite of rooms for 2 men. 220 S. Ingalls. )C162 ROOMS FOR MEN-$7 per week. Cook- ing privileges. Phone NO 5-5111. )C157 MALE ROOMMATE desired. Modern six room apt. One half block from cam- pus. Fully furnished, new beds and chests, shower and bath. Parking fa- cilities, available immediately. Call NO 2-7004. )C158 APT. WITH POOL: Two University sen- iors have one opening in new luxur- ous 3 man apt. Swimming pool. Call NO 5-7360 after 4:00. )C160 SINGLE or DOUBLE, warm, quiet room One block north of IM Building. Two blocks west of State St. Private en- trance, linens furnished, use of tele- phone. NO 3-9828 after 6 P.M. )C155 FURNISHED APARTMENT for 3 or 4, very reasonable rent, near campus. To see, call NO 3-4402. )C154 BOARD & ROOM - Upperclassman or male graduate. Linen furnished. Rea- sonable rates. At Hill & Forest. Mr. Wentz, 1319 Hill, NO 2-6422. )C151 ROOMS for rent, board included. Med- ical fraternity, reasonable rates. Wash- tenaw Ave. Call NO 2-3215. )C135 FOR RENT: Near Law Club, three rooms and bath, unfurnished. Married cou- ple or single person. NO 2-8569. )C116 3 OR 4 STUDENTS: Ideal new two bed- room furnished and unfurnished apartments for students or staff per- sonnel. New building. 727 East Kings- ley. Phone NO 2-2556. Ward Realty Realtors, 321 E. Huron. )C118 FOR RENT: large double, pleasantly furnished, 2 graduate men. Good lo- cation. Close to campus. Call 2-3093. )C124 FOR RENT: A large double room with private lavatory and bowl. A single room, good beds. A quiet house in a quiet neighborhood. 923 Olivia Ave- nue. Tel. NO 2-1465. )C114 ROOM AND BOARD Board at Michigan Co-op House, 315 N. State or Naka- mura Co-op House, 807 &. State. 20 meals a week for 14 approximately $925 and 4 hours per week. For a trial meal call NO 8-6872. 1-5 P.M. )E18 GOOD FOOD. Reasonable rates. Hill and Forest St. Mr. Wentz. 1319 Hill St. NO 2-6422. )E16 ALTERATIONS LET US convert your double breasted suit or tuxedo to a single breasted model for only $15.00. Double breasted tuxedo to shawl collar with new silk facing for only $22.00. Wide lapel single breasted- to new style narrow lapel for only $11.00. Expert work- manship. Mail to Michaels Tailoring Co., or write for free details. 1425 Broadway, Detroit 26,or phone WOd- ward 3-5776. )P4 FOR SALE A QUIET deluxe Royal portable type- writer, used, $65. Call Norman Luker, NO 5-6145 Days, NO 3-097 Evenings, )B120 BEDROOM SUITS, sofa, dining room table and chairs, air conditioner, enamel tea wagon, ironing board and bathroom scale. 302 West Davis, Apt. No. 5 after 2 p.m. )B117 ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords - $7.25: socks 39c; shorts, 69c; military sup- plies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )Bl1 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily LINES 2 3 4 Classified Figure 5 average words to a line. deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 11:00 A.M. Saturday Phone NO 2-3241 I BUSINESS SERVICES ON PACKARD right off State Street- that's our convenient location. Our hours are convenient too-7:30 a.m. 'til midnight. RALPH'S MARKET (formerly Freeman's) 709 Packard NO 2-3175 "Just two doors from the Blue Front" )J98 IMPORTED CANDY AND GROCERIES CLEAN COOKED AND DE-VEINED SHRIMP FOR COCKTAILS WASHINGTON FISH MARKET 208 E. WASHINGTON NO 2-2589 )J26 TYPING-Theses, term papers, etc. Rea- sonable rates. 830 S. Main. NO 8-7590 )J95 TYPING, GENERAL, In my home, expe- rienced, will pick up and deliver. Ph. GE 8-2554. )J96 TYPEWRITER REPAIR and service; pick up and delivery. Moseley Type- writer Service. 204 N. 4th Avenue, NO 3-5888. )J30 SAME people, same quality, same prod- ucts. Only our name has been changed. We're open from 8:00 A.M. till midnight every day of the week. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 2-3175 "Just two doors from the Blue Front" )J108 ANN ARBOR EMPLOYERS PERSONNEL 504 First National Bldg. NO 5-6107 )103 WASHINGS AND IRONINGS done in my home. Reasonable prices. Free de- livery. Call NO 3-4850. )J1o0 ALTERATIONS, DRESSMAKING, Suits, coats, etc. done reasonably. 618 Pack- ard NO 2-8449. )Jl 100% WOOL CARPETING, wall to wall installation. This includes rubber face padding, deluxe installation and for only $8.95 a square yard. A saving of $3.75 a square yard. SMITH FLOOR COVERING 207 E. Washington NO 3-5538 )J89 LINOLEUM, wall tile. shades, venetian blinds installed poperly. Murphy " Brothers, 320 E. Liberty. NO 8-6725. )J35 ONE-DAY SERVICE for shoe repairing and hat cleaning at SANFORD'S also fine tailoring, suits pressed and shoe shining 119 East Ann Street. Phone: Business NO 8-6966 30 years in same location (opposite court house) )J99 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES ATLAS GRIP-SAFE TIRES 4-670x15, $66.95; 4-710x15, $74.95; 4-760x15, $82.85. Plus tax and recappable tire. Budget terms HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION Cor. Main and Catherine-NO. 8-7717 )820 WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 )S2 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. At- las tires, batteries and accessories. Waranteed & guaranteed. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service -- mechanic on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get it" 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 183 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS CLEARANCE SALE RECORD PLAYERS $19.95 UP MUSIC CENTER 300 S. Thayer NO 2-2500 ) X41 WHY PAY MORE? When CAMPUS RADIO & T.V. offers lowest service rates and parts dis- counts to students and University personnel. Fast, dependable service on radios, phono% T.V., Hi-Fi. CAMPUS RADIO & T.V. 1111 South Univ. (second floor) NO 5-6644 "Owned & Operated by University Students" ?X44 EXPERT SERVICE on Radios, Phonographs, and Televisions COMPLETE STOCK OF PHONOGRAPH NEEDLES, RADIO TUBES, ETC. Ann Arbor Radio-TV Service 1217 South University Across from the Campus Theater MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES ' I DAY .80 .96 1.12 3 DAYS 2.00 2.40 2.80 6 DAYS 2.96 #355 4.14 NO 8-7942 )X38 Hear the fabulous NORELCO tape recorder USED TAPE RECORDERS & HI-FI EQUIPMENT FOR SALE OVER 100 BRANDS OF/HI-FI COMPONENTS IN STOCK HI FI STUDIO 1317 South University (one block east of Campus Theater) --Daily-David Arnold UNDER THE HOOD-Icy blasts and sub-zero temperatures have caused discomfort for others besides wind whipped pedestrians. Here a driver examines his unwilling car, trying to determine exactly where and how 'winter has done him wrong. A local garage estimated Monday that it had completed more than 500 emergency calls and left many more unanswered after telephone lines became hopelessly tied up. The garage said that Monday's traffic ,snarl was the worst in their 12-year history of emergency servicing. The Michigan Automobile Club advises all motorists to observe cold weather precautions such as keeping batteries charged, putting cars in garages, keeping gas tanks full, and, of course, using the best possible anti-freeze. It also helps to limit the use of accessories to be sure of a ready supply of electricity when starting. Roads, as well as cars, have been causing difficul- ties, and they will continue to be treacherous as long as the "deep freeze" remains. NO 8-7942 )X39 PIANOS (Baldwin, Ivers & Pond, Estey) and Organs (Baldwin, Estey, Thomas). New and Used. Terms Rare Violins & Bows Restoration MADDY MUSIC 508 E. William NO 3-3223 )X33 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Yale ring, Class of 1955. Initials C.B.C. inside. Reward. Phone NO 3- 4018. )A102 Read Daily Classifieds ratorical Group To Present ravelogue on Paris, Riviera "Paris and the Riviera," the irst of the Burton Holmes Trave- >gues, will be presented tomorrow. t 8:30 p.m. Sponsored by the University ratorical Association, the mo- ion picture will be shown in Hill ud. Much of the film, which is nar- ated by Robert Mallet, presents kaleidoscopic view of many his- oric, scenic and. architectural arts of the surrounding country ide. The film follows the valley of he Rhone, the site of stately iedieval castles, the settings of amous legends of songs and tores. The trip continues through the French .Alps, culminating in a stop at the Riviera, along the beaches of Cannes and Nice. These provide background for the blue Mediterranean. First-hand observations of the Kelly-Prince Rainier wedding, taken in the tiny principality of Monaco, is another part of the film. The series includes: Hawaii, Feb. 27; the great Northwest, March 6; Ireland, March 13; and Alaska, March 20. Tickets for the complete series, as well as for individual perform- ances, are now on sale at the box office at Hill Aud. The box office hours are from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Psychologist To Talk Today Prof. Adriaan de Groot, research psychologist and professor of psychology at the University of Amsterdam will speak today on "The Validation of Projective Techniques in the Netherlands" at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. B, Angell Hall. In his speech, he will discuss the evaluation of projective in- struments in the Netherlands. The instruments are used by clinical psychologists to study mental dis- orders. The lecture is one of the Psy- chology Colloquium series, and it is open to the public. STUDENTS I Just 5 days left to purchase STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE "Coverage until Sept. 10, 1958 for only $7.5O More information at Student Activities Building : :.: I OUNCIL COMMUNIQUE: ITSIS Helps Students Plan Travels Abroad DIAL NO 8-6416 Week Nights at 7 and 9 P.M. ENDS TONIGHT COMPLETE WINTER TUNE-UIP FOR FAST WINTER STARTING ROAD SERVICE GOLDEN'S SERVICE STATION 601 Packard NO 8-9429 )518 I1 About this time of year, many students begin to make plans for a summer vacation or for spending their next year of college studying abroad. Few of these people now realize that there is an organization on campus whose main concern is with helping them to plan their trips. This committee is ITSIS, the International Travel-Study Infor- mation Service. It has been for- mulated by the National-Interna- tional Committee, a part of the Administrative Wing of SGC. The purpose of ITSIS is to act as a servi-e to the student body by providing a complete information center. It is a non-profit commit- tee where all opportunities are stressed. TT r*A - tt-is-- ta ft -n. ern women's colleges: that of spending your Junior year at the Sorbonne in Paris or some other foreign university. Thirdly, ITSIS can explain the Community projects, or Communi- ty Living, as it is sometimes re- ferred to. Community Living is highlighted by a plan called the Experiment in International Liv- ing whereby a great deal of the time that you are abroad, you live with a family in the country of your choice. Not only does ITSIS provide free pamphlets on major countries, but its members are interested in help- ing you plan your whole trip. They will have lists available of students on campus who have pre- viously made the same tour you "And God created woman"l but the devil invented BRIGITTE BARDOT ." sB DIAL NO 2-3136 . r The "Battle Cry" Story of The American Commandos ILLINOIS COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY A Mk - 00-a a:J I I Eh-11, I0 1t 1 i