Foin THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1955 -Daily-Hal Leeds MAURICE RINKEL-Friendly financial advisor and. supervisor for student organizations. Auditor Rinkel Enj Oys Vital, Round-the-Clock Profession Conductors' Conference Set To Open Monday will mark the beginning of the Seventh Annual National Band Conductors' Conference, for which 400 conductors are expected to gather at the University. The five-day session will feature concerts by bands from 28 states and Canada. Workshop sessions are scheduled throughout the week to demonstrate the phases of modern high school and college bands. The National Championship Jo- liet Township High School Band will perform in a concert in Hill Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Monday. The concert will be open to the public without admission charge. Program Planned "Overture to RussIan and Lud- milla," by Michael Glinka, "Fin- ale: Violin Concert in E Minor" by Mendelssohn, "Come Sweet Death" by Bach, "Festival at Bag- dad" by Rimsky-Korsakoff and "Finale" from Dvorak's "Sym- phony No. 4" will be played. Several marches, a medley of tunes made popular by the Glenn Miller band and a drum quintet will be feature numbers. Under the direction of George Cavender, assistant conductor of University bands, the Joliet band will demonstrate new marching techniques at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Wines Field. Woodwind Quintet Wednesday, the University Woodwind Quintet will give a con- cert at 8:30 p.m. in Rackham Au- ditorium. Members are Prof. Al- bert Luconi of the clarinet depart- ment and Clyde Carpenter, french horn, Hugh Cooper, bassoon, Nel- son Hauenstein, flute, and Florian Mueller, obde, of the woodwinds department. An outdoor concert and lectures will follow Thursday and Friday. The entire program is under the supervision of Prof. William D. Revilli, director of the University Bands. CAMPUS CALENDAR PICTURES by HAL LEEDS A Lazy Weekend at Silver .Lake I BY PAT ROELOFS The perpetual, friendly smile Maurice Rinkel is well known students. of to For the handsome, white-haired auditor has a round-the-clock job balancing books for the student organizations. His official titles are Auditor of Students Organizations, and Business Secretary to the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications. And keeping close watch over finances for student groups rang- ing from political clubs to campus- wide dance sponsors requires more. than ability with figures. Not only must Rinkel supervise book- keeping for student organizations, he must contact hundreds of people outside the University who sell services and goods to student groups. Homecoming Costs For example, when the annual Homecoming dance is being plan- ned, and student committees work- 'U Michigan Series To Be. Shown on TV Two series of programs featuring highlights of the summer session's Michigan program will begin this week end on WWJ-TV, Detroit. First in the "Ships on the Sea- way" series will be seen Saturday at 5:15 p.m. This program will deal with predictions on how life in Michigan may change with com- pletion of the St. Lawrence Sea- way. First program in toe seven week series "Understanding Our World" is titled "Painters and Paints." It features four amateur artists from Port Huron, Dearborn, Saginaw and Ann Arbor. The four painters will discuss their work, now on exhibit in Rackham Galleries, with 150 other amateur entries. Subsequent programs will fea- ture "The Two-Party System in Michigan," "Transportation Hori- zons," "The Future of Michigan's Northland" and "Early Michigan Folklore." All programs originate on kine- scope film prepared in the Univer- sity Television Studio under the direction of Prof. Garnet R. Garri- son. To Discuss Party Syste m Two Representatives of the two- party system in Michigan will meet to discuss this system Tues- day. Lt. Gov. Philip A. Hart (D) and Wade Van Valkenburg will debate at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall.. Prof. James K. Pollock, chair- man of the political sciences de- partment, will preside. ing on the dance begin planning decorations and choosing a band, Rinkel is called in to give advice on costs of the same operations for past years and to suggest how much should be spent this year. It is the personal contacts he makes that please him most about his two jobs, he says. He finds working with students pleasant, and spends many long hours meet- ing with planning committees, act- ing as financial advisor. Two-thirds of day is spent in Rm. 1053 Administration Bldg., where he supervises bookkeeping for all recognized student groups. He has two bookkeepers working under him in this office. Long Hours But his work as Auditor doesn't end. at 5 p.m. When %a student sponsored program charging ad- mission is held at night, Rinkel must work overtime, taking care of the money before it can be de- posited in the bank. The heaviest month of work for Rinkel just ended with the close of the books for the 1955 fiscal year. Like the government's book- keeping system, the University's runs from July 1 to June 30. Unlike student organizations themselves, which function only during the weeks school is in ses- sion, bookkeeping must go on, and Rinkel's job doesn't stop for stu- dents' holidays. Publications Advisor His job as Business Secretary for the Board in Control of Student Publications takes up one-third of his office hours. There he works as financial advisor for The Daily, Gargoyle, Ensian ;and Generation business staffs. Books for student publications are not kept with those of other student organizations because the Board in Control operates publica- tions apart from other student groups. Rinkel's jobs began two years ago when Dean of Men Walter Rea, who was then Associate Dean of Students, and acting as auditor in addition to his other duties, was promoted. The job of super- vising the financial status of stu- dent organizations became a time consuming one and Rinkel was appointed to it. He had previously been employ- ed in the Internal Audit Section of the University. Golf and Gardening When Rinkel isn't occupying himself with the financial prob- lems of University student groups, he likes to squeeze in some golf and gardening. During the winter months, "when there is time," he enjoys wood working. The off-campus hours of the friendly financial expert are spent with his wife, who spends her spare hours doing creative writing, and lis six-year-old daughter Janis. Rinkel received his bachelors and masters degrees in business .administration at the University, and before his employment with the University worked in New York. * i DUEL IN THE SUN--After bloating themselves on Sheesh Kabob, Etta Lubke and Bobbie Hard parry playfully with two swekers of the Turkish delight. Sheesh Kabob is a delicious Middle Eastern concoction, including heavily-spiced lamb cubes, tomatoes, mushrooms, onions, and green peppers- all on a skewer, according to Lubke, queen of the local connoiseurs. CRAZY OTTO-Miss Hard tries to convince Otto the Dachshund, who looks unconvinced, that Sheesh Kabob is, after all, better than German hotdogs and at best a more sophisticated dish. .4 Talk cn Russia .0.. 4 Dr. Lazar Volin of the United States Department of Agriculture will speak on "Soviet Farming: Achilles Heel?" at 3:00 p.m. Mon- day in room 407 Mason Hall. His speech will be presented as a part of the Inter-Departmental Seminar in Russian Studies and is open to the public. ** * Television Programs .. Nicholas Schreiber, principal of the new Ann Arbor High School, will describe the new school at 6:45 p.m. Monday over WPAG-TV on "Dateline Ann Arbor." On the same program, Peggy Nairm, assistant director of the speech department's production of "Heartbreak House," will discuss the play. "The Little Leaf That Wanted to Stay Green," an original story by Jerome Segal, will be telecast at 6:30 p.m. At 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Ronald Daw- son will discuss arts and crafts on "310 Weekly." Michigan Movies... The Audio-Visual Education Center will present four movies on Michigan and the Great Lakes at 7:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. Monday. The 9:00 p.m. showing will be presented on the front steps of the General~ Library. Auditorium A, Angell Hall will be the site of the 7:30 presentation. Two of the movies, "Michigan-- Water Wonderland" and "Michi- gan -- Winter Wonderland," will show the great recreational possi- bilities of the state. The other two movies will pre- sent scientific studies, "Michigan Marsh and Shore Birds" and "Great I, akes - How They were formed." t } FIT FOR A CALIPH OTTO COMES AROUND . .. BUT OTHERS PREFERRED FISH . . . and maybe a Missourian .I 4 Singapore Troubled by Communists SINGAPORE (A - Malaya's Communists are driving hard to upset law and order in this rich British crown colony. Strikes are spreading. Rioting is being fomented. Communist - in spired Chinese high school stu- dents are openly defying the police. Businessmen in this great Far Eastern port city-one of the world's busiest-face the future with undisguised fear and skepti- cism. Protest Rising are Chinese. He says now is the their demands are m time for "nursing" rather than government threaten whipping the students who, siding ringleaders and clox with strikers, have spearheaded their schools, the stu rioting the hostile demonstrations ened "serious trouble' against the government. thorities backed dowi Subversive Campaign Police Arrest Police finally did Sparking the threatened vio- pickets for obstructin lence is the most intensive sub- big gatherings of s versive campaign the Red Chinese strikes still go on. underground has waged,on the is-stesstidont land colony since it unleashed The students say tl guerrilclonyrfarein theunglesinterference with the upcountry in the spring of 1948. doctrines they are bei man yof their classes et. When the ed to expel se three of dents threat- "and the au- tn. 127 arrest 127 g them. But tudents and hey want no Red Chinese ng taught in s. They have SOME SWAM... ... SOME SLID .. AND OTHERS TOSSED HORSESHOES, I