/ THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMB~ER US ROOMING: lord Dislikes 'Rowdy' Students need from Page 1) mit, Dr. Speer explains, lnly to keep tenants for semester but pays for I theft in case they do are imposed on Dr. ants other than those cessary in having an partment in the build- ants may come and go as they please, but must not have women in their rooms. Rough- housing upstairs is discouraged, because of the office on the first floor," the landlord explains. "I've had no real trouble over drinking," he goes on. "One pair of boys moved hi and only stayed two weeks. The others said they were coming in soused. The two boys found another place and I was Just as glad.. .i I LY OFFICIAL, BULLETIN II (Continued from Page 4) 429, Mason Hall, Tues., Nov. 19, .m. and Wed.,,Nov. 20, 4:00 p.m. atter sesion is designed primarily Lgaged aid married students. ticatl Science Roundtable Tues., 19, at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackiam bLy Hall. Discussion by Professors +t Ward, Henry Bretton, and * ,Grassmuck, with Prof. Roy , moderator. All are from the Po- '"ience Department. The topic ban-Rural Patterns in the Poli- r'Japan, West Africa, and the States." Refreshments. hematis Colloquium, at 4:10 p.m. m "3011, Angell Hall. Prof. Fred right will speak on "Some Exten- of Results for Alpha-regular ons." Refreshments at 3:45 in 3212 (Copimons Room). rations Research Seminar: Dr. 0 Grabbe, Senior Staff Consult- a Automation, The Ramo-Woold- Corp., will lecture on "Computers Doss Control" on Wed., Nov. 20. ho'Mur iln oom '243, West Engi- tg at 3:30 and seminar at 4:00 in *229 West Engineering. All facul-' onbere' are welcome. toral . Examination for Gordon er Dean, Pharmaceutical Chem- thesis: "Antispasmodies: Substi- beta-Phenyl-gamma-Hydroxypro- ines and Thiazole Analogs of idine," Tues., Nov.1, 2525 Chem- Oldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, F. F. FOREIGN VISITORS following foreign visitors will be e campus this week on the dates Med. Program arrangements are made by the International Con- rs. Miller. Jose Aleman Garcia, -Director, of Literature, Univ. of San Carlo, mala, Nov. 16-18. Fehim First, Professor at the Fac- lf Forestry, Istanbul Univ., and or of Forestry, Products and )mis I n st it u t e, Turkey, Nov. l' Maria Palliou, President, Pierce oe Alumnae Association, Greece, 19-21. r Helen Andreades-Apcarian, See- -eneral, - Constantinople Wo- College Alumnae Association, *, Nov. 19-21. El Asia Taha, Head, Photographic tment, National Research Center pt, Cairo, Egypt, Nov. 18-28. ( zcemnent Notices following schools have listed ng vacances with the Bureau of Atments for February, 1958. They ot be here to interview at this 'oit, Michigan (Redford Union ) - Speech Correctionist. t, Michigan (Kearsley Agricultur- I School) - Mathematics; Physi- duoation( one woman and one lervlte, Michigan - Mathematics iary or Februay) den City, Michigan - For now or -=,lndergraten; Elementary (1st h); SHS English. For Feb. - Ele- ,ry (1st, 3rd, 4th, and 6th). k Head, New York (North Shore Is) - Elementary (January or ary). e Linden, Michigan - English. Clemens, Michigan -- Special Ed- n (all phases). Canaan, Connecticut -- Elemen- (3rd - December, 1957) , SHS imatics, (January, 1958). th Tonawanda, New York - Gen- Science (9th grade -- January). soOaks, Michigan- Band. verse City, Michigan (Old Mission ;sua School District) '- Elemn- berville, Michigan-Genpral Shop ttemore, Michigan -- Band. any ,additiopal information con- he Bureau of Appointments, 3528 istration Building, NO 3-1511, 89. nel Interviews: appointments with any of the ing, please contact the Bureau pointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., 371. Nov. 21 higan Bell Telephone Co., Detroit, Interviewer - Miss Virginia Phil- College Employment Representa- location of Work-State of Mich- 3raduates - February, June, and t. Women for Public Contact and Management Training Pro- grams, in the various branches in De- troit and in the State. Interviewer - K. A. Newman, Col- lgenEnploymet.Supervisor. Gradu- ates - February. Location of Work - State of Michigan. Constructs, Main- tains, operates te.lephone system in Michigan. Men with BA in Liberal Arts for Management Trainee. American Telephone and Telegraph Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. Graduates-Feb- ruary. Location of work - State of Michigan. Men with BA in Liberal Arts for Management Trainee. Western Electric Company; Detroit, Michigan. Graduates - February. Lo- cation of work - State of Michigan. Men for Management trainees with BA in Liberal- Arts. They,do manufactur- Ing and purchasing for the Bell system. 7th U.S. Civil Serviee Region, Detroit, Michigan. Interviewers: G. A. Butter- bach, Personnel-.Assistant; Jack Dengel, Placement Officer, Railroad Retire- met Board, Alex Co tts, Personnel Officer, Commodity Stabilization Serv- ice, U.S. Dept of Agriculture; James Walsh, Chicago Administration Center. Graduates - February, June, August. Location of Work -1 Anywhere in U.S. (see announcement for more informa- tion) Men and women with BA n Lib eral Arts, Bus Ad., or Law for work in any department of Federal Govern- ment. EliLilly and Company, Indianapolis, Indiana. Interviewer - W. L. Garter, . Chief Personnel Requirements. Gradu- ates - February, Junei Location of work - Indianapolis, Indiana, Phar- maceutical Company. Men and women with BA or MA in Mathematics, Nat- ural Science or Eco omics for Publi Relations, Industrial .Management and Office Methods. The Harvard-Radcliffe Program in business administration; Cambridge, Mass. Interviewer, Rose- mary Bachman, Asst. Director. Gradu- ates - June. One'year graduate course in Bus. Ad., Co-sponsored by the Har- vard Business School and Radcliffe Col- lege. Especially designed for women Liberal Arts Majors who have not had previous courses in business subjects. Women with BA in Liberal Arts for Bus. Admin. Program (formerly the Management Training Program) Loans and Scholarships are available. Fri., Nov. 22 Michigan Bell Telephone Co., - See Thursday's listings. American Telephone and Telegraph Co., - See Thursday's listings. Western Electric Company - See Thursday's listing. Eli Lilly and Company.-See Thurs- day's listing.) Union Carbide Nuclear Company, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Interviewer - David R. Cuneo, Chemist. Graduates - Febru- Ar'. Locationof Work - Oak Ridge, Teun.,'Paducah, Kentucky. Men with deree in, Mathematics. R. R. Donnelley and Sons Co., Chica- go, Ill. Graduates - February. Location of work - Chicago, Illinois. One of the largest printing companies in the world producing printing, 'binding, lithogra- phy and engraving. Our production in- cludes high speed magazine work such as Life and Time; other large volume work such as th large mail order cata- logs, encyclopedias, telephone directo- ries for 1500 different cities. Men with BA and MA in LS&A with technical aptitudes for manufacturing program, BA or MA in LS&A for customer rela- tions leading to sales, purchasing and traffic, and personnel. Representatives from the following will be at the Engrg. School: Wed., Nov. 20 Air Reduction Co., Inc., Murray Hill- N.J. - all levels in Elect., Metal., B.S. in Ch.E. and B.S. and PhD in Chemis- try. E. I. DuPont De Nemours and Co., Wilmington, Dela. - PhD in all Engrg. Programs. City of Miwaukee, Wisconsin -- B.S. and M.S. In Civil, MS. in Constr. fo' Summer and Regular Design and Con- struction. The New Jersey Zinc Co., Palmerton, Pa. - all levels in Metal., Chem. E., Physics, Chem., B.S. in Elect, and Mech. for Research, Development, Production, Mine Engrg., and Plant Engrg. Swift & Co., Chicago, 1ll. - B.S. and M.S. in Chem. E., Elect., and Mech. for Summer and Regular Research, Devel- opment, Design and Const. I For appointments contact the Engrg. Placement Office, 347 W.E., ext. 2182. Summer Placement: Calling all students interested In summer employment: There will be a big meeting of the Summer Placement Service at Aud. B in Angell Hall, on Thurs., Nov. 21, at 3:00 p.m. Open to all students who want to get in on the summer job hunt right from the be- ginning. "Some landlords don't know hu- man nature," he averrs. "They put a good Christian boy next door to one interested in cigarettes, whisky and wild, wild women. -This leads to trouble." Should be Screened Dr. Speer admits that there should be some definite way to screen prospective tenants, but claims a good guide to be where the applicant is from. "Boys from small, towns lfn Michigan, or small towns any- where, tend to be quieter than big- city boys. New Yorkers tend to be rough and loud-talking. Of course, there. are startling exceptions," he added. Generally Dr. Speer doesn't try to size up prospective tenants, but instead makes sure they under- stand what the conditions will be. If he told them the rules about rough-housing and the rest after- wards, he says, there'd be trouble. "Because of the slight housing shortage the landlords can afford to screen a little," Dr. Speer adds. High Overhead Besides his complaints onpos- sible low rents, Dr. Speer considers high overhead due to bulding re- pairs the main reason rooms aren't a good investment. , Before he moved into the build- ing in 1953, the doctor had $2,500 worth of alterations done, chief among them the enclosing of the porch, now used as a waiting room for his chiropractic patients. He had carpenters in to do the construction work, but painted the walls himself. "I'm no carpenter," Dr. Speer explains, "but I like to' piddle with interior decoration. With these new rollers you can really conjure up some things if you have the knack." Dr. Speer evaluates his invest .ment at $22,000 and considers his return of $1600 per year less than the return from good stock invest- mhnts. It carries the overhead on the office, he says, or would if he were not still paying off the prin- cipal. Eight Dollars The rent for Dr. Speer's single, furnished rooms is eight dollars a week. This includes a bath and linen. The tenants do their own cleaning. Because of these expenditures, Dr. Speer doesn't "think much of rooms." He adds, however, that since there is a housing shortage and the four rooms are there he'd feel guilty about not renting them. As an exception to the rule on ±eiting rooms, Dr. Speer cites an example from his undergraduate days at Linboln Chiropractic Col- lege in Indianapolis. He put down $600 for an old house and became a landlord, recovering his initial investment in a very short time. Beginners EMONTON MP)-- A dairy here has taken a fro the automobile driving schools, When It is breaking in a new horse on a milk route, a sign at the rear of the wagon advises motorists: "Caution: Student horse.' Coffee Hour to Be Held The English Departmental Cof- fee Hour will be held from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. today in the Terrace Room of the Union. Coffee and cookies will be served. "This coffee hour will give stu- dents an opportunity to have in- formal discussions of English with members of the faculty," Irvin Schatz, '60, of the Academic Serv- ices Committee said. He added that all members of the faculty and student body are invited. In the past, as many as 100 faculty members have at- tended these coffee hours. Japan Politics To Be Explored Three University professors will discuss "Urban-Rural Patterns in the Politics of Japan, West Africa and the Arab States" today. The discussion is scheduled for 8 p.m. in Aud. B, Angell Hall. It is being sponsored by the Political Science Roundtable. Taking part will be Prof. Robert E. Ward, Prof. Henry L. Bretton and Prof. GeorgeL. Grassmuck of the political science department. Prof. Roy Pierce of the political science department will act as moderator. The meeting is open to the public. Bowles Hits Admissions Difficulties Solutions to the administrative problem of admissions were pro- posed by Frank H. Bowles, presi- dent of the College Entrance Ex- amination Board of New York State. Two solutions were proposed. One of them would be for colleges currently under admission appli- cation pressure, to institute a longer and more flexible cycle of admissions p r o c e d u r e, inviting and deciding on certain applicants before or early in their senior year. Each candidate currently re- quires from seven to 10 admission operations, with scholarship ap- plications requiring from five to eight additional steps, Pres. Bowles stated. "The colleges eduld, with rela- tively little effort, get in contact with all or nearly all of their can- didates months earlier than they now do. They could use a prelim- inary screening test to make ad- visory Judgements on preliminary applications and could begin to make certain types of final de- cisions, that is negative decisions, shortly after receiving the Jan- uary or February test scores," he continued. The second solution suggested by the Board's report was to de- sign 'and administer a central clearing house operation, which would leave to the colleges the full exercise of admissions discre- tion, employing whatever combi- nation of information and judge- ment they would wish to employ. "If application pressures on col- lege . . . continue to increase at the rate at which they have been increasing for the past five years, then we must expect that the ad- missions process as we now know it will suffer a clerical breakdown by 196," Mr. Bowles said. Professors To Discuss Red -Science Three University professors will discuss different aspects of Soviet science at 8 p.m. today in Aud. B, Angell Hall. Prof. Arthur J. Lohwater of the mathematics department will dis- cuss mathematics and science as they relate to education in Russia. In June and July, 1956, the So- viet' Academy of Sciences invited Prof. Lohwater to address the So- viet Mathematical Congress in Moscow. Prof. Henry J. Gomberg, assis- tant director of the Michigan Me- morial-Phoenix Project, was in- vited in April, 1957, to attend a meeting of the Soviet Academy of Sciences on the uses of radio- activity. While in Moscow, he vis- ited the university, research in- stitutes, and the atomic power plant just outside Moscow. Prof. Gomberg will discuss the nuclear aspects of the Soviet sci- entific program. In August, 1956, Prof. Orren C. Mohler of the astronomy depart- ment visited Moscow, Leningrad and the Crimea, primarily to vis- it. the Astrophysical Observatory in the Crimea. Prof. Mohler will describe and compare the Soviet and. American astronomical faci- lities and accomplishments. Prof. Emeritus George Y. Rain- ich of the mathematics depart- ment will acefas chairman for the porgram, which will be held in Aud. B, Angell Hall. The program is open to the public without charge. Pollock To Deliver Talk Tod On Trends in German Politi RAIN COVERS and OIL Protect Bikes 0 Prof. James K. Pollock, chair- man of the political science de- partment, will speak on "Modern Political Trends in Germany" in Rm. 3G of the Union at 7:30 p.m. today. In discussing this subject, Prof. Pollock will use two movies on West Germany. He will deal chiefly with the last West Ger- marl election, from which he re- cently returned. An advisor to the Departme of State on West German po ties, he is considered an author on German government. AP World War II, he'helped to set the new West German gover ment. Prof. Henry W. Nordmeh chairman of the German depa ment will introduce him, Student Bicycle Shop 1319 S. University NO 8-6927 Your Doctors' Prescriptions Filled I FINEST Q UALITY MATERIALS Precision Work CAMPUS OPTICIANS . . I 240 Nickels Arcade Dial NO 2-9116 1 U , E.E.'s, M.E's, A.E.'s, Math, Physics and Chemistry Majors. The Pledges of DELTA.SIGMA PHI' hath beaten the pledges of ALPHA TAU OMEGA toa cofltest of football 32-12 I'3 i j __ 1 W JOININ'THE VANGUARD'. E have entered the age of fully guided supersonle missile flight. This state can be attributed, in large measure, to scientists and other technical men at the Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) of The Johns Hop- kins University. Since 1945 we have been in the vanguard of the guided missile field. Young engineers and scientists with above-average ability will want to know more about APL: how we built the first ramjet engine, the first large booster rocket, achieved fully guided supersonic flight as far back as 1948, developed TALOS, one of the country's most suc- cessful long range missiles,.and how we are presently engaged in missile programs of such urgency that little is spared to facilitate their progress. You'll also be interested in finding out why the record of achievement of our 550-man engineering and scientific staff is exceptional, about how we can allow greater scope for creative thinking because our sole goal is technical achievefnent. Our laboratories, covering over 350,000 square feet; are located in rolling countryside midway between Washington, D. C. and Baltimore, Md. These facilities, combined with those of our 18 major contractors and Government test stations provide exceptional opportu- nities for staff members to develop and extend their capabilities. For detailed information on APL, an organization of and for technical men and scientists, ask your Placement Officer for our new 30-page publication or write: Pro- fessional Staff Appointments. A ATTENTION SENIORS! The Elliot Company representative will be at the FOLLETT'S MICHIGAN BOOK STORE 322 S. STATE STREET on Wednesday, November 20th, INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS *%M 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. ii NOVEMBER 21 A representative of the Applied Physics Laboratory of The Johns Hopkis University will be co.your to personally assist you in ordering your