MICHIGAN DAILY Lys C 'misty Addition istruction Progessing Well Construction of the new million- dollar chemistry building addition is progressing rapidly with the under- ground tunnels now being laid, ac- cording to Prof. L. O. Case, of the Department of Chemistry and chair- man of the Chemistry Building Com- mittee. He expects that more than a year will be required for completion. With the new building in opera- tion, the University will have one of the finest and best equipped chemistry departments in the country. Prof. Case said that the Commit- tee was "well pleased with the pro- gress so far." More Window Area The addition will differ in style from the old chemistry building. In- stead of four-foot thick walls, the addition will have thinner walls, more window area, and be complete- ly modern in every respect. Two en- trances will be located on the side facing Waterman Gymnasium, and shipping and receiving will be facili- tated from N. University Avenue. Floor levels will not coincide with those of the old building, but long Sanford Urges Public School Job Planning Better personnel methods in the public schools, including more ade- quatedefinitions of jobs and respon- sibilities and a good salary scale, were recommended yesterday by Prof. Charles W. Sanford during the School of Education's lecture series on trends in education. Prof. Sanford,a visiting professor at the University, is regularly on the faculty of the University of Illinois. "In selecting new personnel for the school, the administrative head of the school should define the posi- tion to be filled, including both the curricular and extra-curricular dut- ies," Prof. Sanford declared. "More attention," he continued, "should be given to the academic qualifications desired." A salary schedule is "good" only if it is acceptable to the people con- cerned, Prof. Sanford explained. A goodschedule, he said, will include provisions for leaves of absence, sick leave, and fluctuations in the cost of living.I Local Flier, PCA Pilot Thomas B. Dyer, 3430 Oakwood,' has been made first officer of the commercial pilots flying for PCA from Willow Run, it was learned yesterday Dyer, a captain in the AAF, flew army transports in India and China, and dropped food to outposts in Burma, as well as flying land fighters from an aircraft carrier. To Attend Alumni Meet T. Hawley Tapping, general sec- retary of the Alumni Association will leave Tuesday for a meeting of the American Alumni Council at Am- herst, Mass. Accompanying him will be Mrs. Lucille B. Conger, executive secre- tary, Alumnae Council of Alumni As- sociation, and Mrs. Lunette Haley, director, Alumni Catalogue Office. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) held in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building on Friday, July 12, at 4:00 p.m. Spanish Teas: Every Tuesday and Friday, language tables will convene in the League cafeteria at 4 p.m. for informal conversation practice. On Thursdays, the group will meet at the International Center at 4 p.m. All students interested in practicing Spanish conversation are invited to attend. University of Michigan Sailing Club: Officers, Members, and poten- tial members: There will be a meet- ing of the club at 1:00 pm.. on Sat., July 13 at the Michigan Union. Will the secretary please bring the roll of members. We will leave for Whit- more Lake shortly after 1 p.m. The Graduate Outing Club will meet Sunday, July 14, for an after- noon of hiking and swimming. Inter- ested graduate students should meet in the club rooms in the Rackham Building at 2:00 p.m., Sunday. Will those who can bring cars please call George Costello at. 5159 to discuss arrangements? ramps will connect the two adjoin- ing buildings. Every type of research facility will be provided in the new structure. Special research rooms will be pro- vided. Constant Temperature Room There will be a constant-tempera- ture rooms, two dust free rooms, an electron defraction room, dark rooms, a machine shop, a high-pressure or- ganic reactions room, an optical ex- perimental room and a vibrationless room which will be constructed with a large concrete slab separated from the rest of the building. When need- ed, other smaller rooms can be adapt- ed to special research needs in a major fields of chemistry. The, Chemistry Store will occupy the basement and basement mezza- nine, which will be utilized for stor- age. Each floor of the new addition will have a dispensing room and staff. The Chemistry Library will be ex- tended over most of the south end of the present structure, and steps are being taken to render the books safe from water, liquids, and fire. Depressed Floors in Lecture Rooms Two main lecture rooms will oc- cupy the center of the first floor in the new building. The rooms will be lighted by the most modern means and will have depressed floors to give unobstructed vision. The basement will receive light provided by means of an areaway and depressed win- dows. Tunnels, running below the level of the basement will bring water, steam,, heat, electricity, and other resources to the building. Each department of chemistry will share in the annexation; two large, completely equipped laboratories on the fourth floor will be used by gen- eral chemistry, while qualitative analysis and organic chemistry each will receive two laboratories. A phar- macy food and drug laboratory will be built in addition to new general pharmacy laboratories. The first floor will feature a large physical chemistry laboratory. Above the phy- sical chemistry laboratory on the second floor, the chemistry stores will be located; a Gas and Microanalysis laboratory is planned for the third floor, while advanced inorganic chemistry will dominate this section on the fourth floor. The building is expected to greatly alleviate present overcrowding of the Chemistry Building. Council Offers Inforration Aid The formation of a Community Information Service designed to aid the people of Ann Arbor and Wash- tenaw County in finding the proper social services to solve their per- sonal, health, and recreational prob- lems was announced yesterday by Gladwin Lewis, executive secretary for the Council of Social Agencies. Ann Arbor, according to Lewis, has more than the average number of social agencies and services avail- able, but many people are not taking advantage of them for lack of know- ledge. In addition to furnishing informa- tion and making referrals of cases, the service will investigate all com- plaints against social agencies in the community, Lewis said. The service, which will render aid free of charge, is located on the third floor of the Municipal Court Build- ing. Speech Clinic Begins Course A six week course in Speech cor- rection began at the speech clinic this week, Harlan Bloomer, head of the clinic announced yesterday. Children between the ages of 8 and 10, adolescents, and young adults will be examined and retrained at the clinic. Factors contributing to some of the articulatory and stuttering de- fects are hearing losses, neurological damages, cleft palates, and mis- use of speech organs, Bloomer said. The speech correction classes were full, Bloomer said, it was impossible to accomodate all who applied. Group To Visit GE Television Station WRGBI Trip to Schenectady Planned for July 25 Prof. David Owen, speech students, electronics engineers and others in- terested in television will leave by train July 25 to visit television sta- tion WRGB in Schenectady. New York, Prof. Owen said yesterday. . Students will leave Thursday and will return Saturday morning, spend- ing all day Friday at the television station. Fifteen people have signed up to go on the trip Owen said, adding that he hoped that the number of students making the trip will reach 25 so that University students can charter a separate railroad coach. Sleeping quarters will be provided for on the train in that case, otherwise the students will be accommodated in large male and female shower and dressing rooms at the Schenectady station, Owen said. WRGB is the pioneer television sta- tion in the United States, Owen said, and is owned and operated at Gen- eral Electric. Most of the engineers at the Televisionsstation are Michi- gan graduates, Owen said, adding that in fact the percentage of Michi- gan engineers is so great, that others apologize for not being Michigan graduates. Students Arrive From Sweden A group of 35 Swedish civil engi- neering students from the Royal In- stitute of Technology in Stockholm are due to arrive in Ann Arbor today and stay through tomorrow. They are making a study trip of the United States which will last approximately four weeks, during which they will cover about 2,850 milos. Dean Ivan C. Crawford, of the Col- lege of Engineering, has been in- formed of their arrival and will ar- range a brief inspection trip of the engineering college facilities. Louis Predicts Easy Victory Over Mauriello By The Associated Press NEW YORK. July 10-The next victim to be led into the pit against Bomber Joe Louis will be Tami Mauriello, a pudgy barkeep out of the Bronx who is a perfectly rational young man except that he wants to get into a fight with the heavy- weight champion. Louis was a lot more interested in the new car fChrysler Windsor) he got here today than he was in dis- cussing his September scrap with Mauriello. In sports clothes and wearing a baggy white peak cap, The Champ took time off from his golfing to get delivery on the new auto. I-M Results Residence Hall softball compe- tition got underway yesterday af- ternoon at Ferry Field as Vaughn, Hinsdale, Rumsey and Prescott Houses emerged victorious in the initial games. Vaughn trampled Tyler 21-8, Hinsdale nipped Flet- cher in a close battle 7-5, Rumsey beat Green by the same margin, and Prescott defeated Wenley 5-3. The fraternity and independent loops see action today. The sched- ule: Sigma Chi vs. Zeta Beta Tau; Theta Xi vs. Phi Sigma Delta; Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Delta Tan Delta; Vets Housing vs. Law- yers' Club; Gamma Delta vs. Pick- Ups. THE WINNING PITCHERS-The winning pitchers relax in their dressing room after hurling the American League squad to a 12-0 victory over the Nationals in the 13th annual All-Star game in Boston. Left to right they are John Kramer, St. Louis Browns; Hal Newhwiser, Detroit Tigers; and Bobby Feller of the Cleveland Indians. Church Guilds Plan Forums Groups To Participate In Discussion Meets Seven University church guilds are cooperating in forum discussions on the meaning of Chritsianity. Meetings are held at the First Con- gregational Church from 7 to 8 p.m. during the month of July. Sermon topics and speakers listed for the program; are: "How Shall We Think of God" by the Rev. W. P. Lemon; "How Does Jesus Save Us" by the Rev. J. Brett Kenna; and "The Life After Death" by the Rev. Leon- ard A. Parr. The ministers from the-cooperating churches will deliver their addresses from the pulpit and come down to a table in the front of the church to answer questions and to conduct the forum. The Rev. Henry Lewis of St. Andrews Episcopal Church will pre- side. Record Field Seen, for State Golf Tourney CHARLEVOIX, Mich., July 10-() -A near-record field, with the even- tual championship crown labelled a wide open scramble, was in prospect tonight for the 1946 amateur title scrap of the Michigan State Golf League. In mid-afternoon the entry list had passed the 175 mark and tourna- ment manager, James D. Standish, Jr., of Detroit, said he expected the field to number close to 200 by the time the first contestants leave the starting tee for the qualifying round Thursday morning. The League's 36th championship affair will be decided over the scenic Belvedere Course with the absentees including Sam Kocsis, 27-year-old Detroiter who won the crown when the tournament was last played in 1941 over this same course. Just out of the Army, Kocsis said his job in Detroit would keep him from par- ticipating. The absence of Kocsis, as well as that of his elder brother, Chuck Kocsis, threw the event into the wide open classification, but the large field numbered an outstanding ar- ray of competitors from all sections of the state. Last Day Today - KISS AND TELL with Shirley Temple and THE MADONNA'S SECRET Friday and Saturday PINNOCHIO and COME OUT FIGHTING. State Tennis Finals Delayed Till Today KALAMAZOO, Mich., July 10--(P) -The heat was too much for even an ardent tennis player today, so finals of the State junior and boys championships have been delayed un- til Thursday and Friday. Decision to postpone the champ- ionship matches came after the semi- finals had been completed. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LOST AND FOUND LOST: 6-20 Kodak camera at Grad- uation. Finder please call Vonal La Rowe, Beal Residence. Phone 2-2521, ext. 132. (16 LOST: Eversharp pen. Name print- ed "Leonard A. Parr." Reward. Phone 2-1679. (11 LOST: Miniature gold football. Vic- inity of South University and U High. Call James Moon at 6557, or leave at Education Library. Re- ward. (8 WANTED WANTED: Sewing-alterations and refitting of young women's cloth- ing. Miss Livingston, 315 S. Divi- sion. 2nd floor, front. WANTED TO RENT TWO STUDENT VETERANS desire apartment or roms within 5 or, 6 miles of Ann Arbor. Phone eve- nings 7331. (15 MARRIED VETERAN desires one or two furnished rooms for fall se- mester. No children. Excellent re- ferences. Junior in Engr. College. Address, W. Burmeister, 403 Doug- las Ave., Elgin, Ill. V (3 WANTED: Veteran graduate stu- dent and wife urgently need a small, furnished apartment im- mediately for fall and spring se- mesters. No children, wife em- ployed. Phone 6286. (14 FOR SALE BOIS BLANC ISLAND: A beautiful cabin with 2-story living room and cobblestone fire place completely furnished. 112 acres' overlooking Mackinaw Island. Ready to move in. Complete book of pictures available. A bargain. Don't miss this one. Inquire Wm. G. Kirby, Realtor, 500 Michigan Bank Bldg., Detroit.A A-1 CONDITION, Underwood Cham- pion- portable typewriter. Phone 9034 afternoons or evenings.P (9 DICTAPHONE (used), Universal Mercury Candid Camera (new). Both reasonable. Call 2-7232 or 813 Granger. (7 HELP WANTED HELI3 WANTED: Experienced lino- type operator in upion shop. Per- manent position. No layoffs. For- ty hour week. Scale, $1.55 an hour, highest in state for comparable cities. Modern plant in residential suburban city. Daily Tribune, Roy- al Oak, Michigan. TUTORING TUTORING : Private Spanish les- sons and conversation. $1 per hour. Call phone 8435. (17 MISCELLANEOUS WANTED AT ONCE. The names and addresses of all Alpha Kappa Alpha women on campus and in Ann Ar- bor. Call 9247 at once. Roberta Ellis Britt. (19 MEALS: Excellent, home-cooked, for students. 604 E. Madison, Phone 4489. (18 BUYING A NEW CAR? See me first for an economical plan of insur- ing and financing it. Bob Craw- ford. Phone 2-7521 in Ann Arbor. Res. 1662 Monson, Willow Run. (13 PLAN for your fall suits and formals now. Expert workmanship on cus- tom-made clothes and alterations. Hildegarde Shop, 116 E. Huron. Phone 2-4669. (10 "WHY PAY MORE than $3.00 for a tennis restringing," said over 50 happy customers. Ph. 2-7360, Dean McClusky, 417 8th St. (6 MEN'S USED CLOTHES wanted. A better price paid. Sam's Store. 122 E. Washington St. (4 Sun. GARFIELD "POSTMAN ALWAYS naama men STARTS TODAY A TRULY FINE PICTURE TURNER RINGS TWICE" CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 1 P.M. w , AI I . --- - -- - _ -- r-_ - _-e. -- -- . I ARCT CINEMA LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL FILM PROGRAM SAVE TIME AND MONEY - BUY A SEASON PASS NOW Series of Five $1.85 (tax fiul.) Singles 42c Available at all Bookstores, Union, League WEDNESDAY and "HEART OF PARIS" (FRENCH) THURSDAY . . . . . with Raimu, Michelle Morgan . ...... AMM No. Alaizz - Opposite Court House THURSDAY, July 18 FRIDAY, July 19 THURSDAY, July 25 r-rIn~AV ' 1 -1- 1 "THE WILDFLOWER" with Dolores Del Rio (Spanish) "MARRIAGE AND JUBILEE" (Russian) I IN Ml i Ncv ~fl - Ono~to ourtHot~ II~i~!II U I II #\ I A /~IIrr 1(1 1 - :