ieiepnonei appmg VereomeWhispering iL4oi )ni'v T wf A Press Survey Claims .SHINGTON P)-Whispering et you nowhere. your phone is tapped, or your adequately bug'ged, your in- ost secrets-if you're inclined ill them-may be overheard ecorded. st of us look with distaste on professional eavesdropper. Yet1 s his mechanical ear to thel id, or to the wire, a lot of the 'even though it's rare that lushed as dramatically as hej a the Goldfine case. .oever would have guessed an investigator for the House lative Oversight subcommit- could have been caught with ectronic device cosying right the' hotel room door? Goldfine Hlorrified 'nard Goldfine, the Boston e man under investigation, ally expressed horror at the very. His lawyers said they horrified, though not so derstruck that they didn't ptly make the most of the4 very of a microphone right to ther room. they certainly would have naive had they expressed too4 isurprise. After all, they had a gumshoe of their own to out such practices. di certainly anyone who hasF around at all knows that, like not, wiretapping and eaves- >ing are fairly big business. re than two pages of the inter Plans, ident Party reception will be held for all international students and friends at 8 p.m. tomorrow e Rackham Assembly Hall. ere will be refreshments and ng, according to Barbara k of the International Center. classified section of the Washimg- ton phone book are used for the detectives to list their numbers and their accomplishments. Reluctant To Talk Understandably though, such firms are very reluctant to talk about their work. Newspapermen, congressmen, yes, and congressional witnesses have complained periodically that their phones were tapped. Now, for an important distinc- tion between wiretapping and eavesdropping. Many legal authorities think wiretapping is not illegal so long as the dirt collected is not di- vulged. Another school holds thatj this is nonsense, that by its very nature it is going to be divulged , to somebody. But everyone seems agreed that eavesdropping, or bugging, whileI messy, is not illegal. So for the benefit of those not aware of the latest in bugging, let's visit a man who is alert to this strange profession, but who must remain anonymous. "Bugging" Hard He says bugg-ing is more corn- plaicted than it looks, that its suc- cess depends on understanding the acoustics in the room. Fur- thermore, amicrophone can be too sensitive. "It'll pick up every- thing except what you want to hear," he said. A good method, he said, is to bore a hole in the wall until the wallpaper is reached, and place the microphone over the hole. Better still, get inside the room in advance and bug the place thoroughly. "Some like the microphone drawn down around the base-t board," he said. "Some hide them in lamp bases. Around the phone is ,good, anywhere where conver- sations are held. "Around the bed is okay, too. Wonderful for divorce cases." , s s': '., c :.h '.. .. J... : .; Hy WALTER BREEDE JR. A ciatFed'ress Staff writer Clarence A. Jackson, president of the Aierican United Life In- suranczie Co. of India~lnlpolis, leanedi back in lhis chair and thoughtfully proclaimed: "Things aren't getting bad as fast as they were," Jackson's comment, in response to a nationwide survey by The Associated Press, comes pretty close to reflecting the general view about the United States economy at the halfway mark of recession 1958, niterd Slits and tou'll fnd most U r teer slivin d better than at an time since World War IL Some hard pressed for help, are offering jobs to unemployed city workers, -Daily-Ai Erbe wer sister, the Undergraduate Library, in its recently, transformed s and faculty members of the University must now take place at the . Both of these changes were a direct result of the heavy budget cuts More Tractors Sold Lloyd Belmer of Fort Do Iowa, sells farm machinery. sold more tractors in the first : months this year than in all 1957, In the lush ,Rio Grande V ley of southern Texas, Basc Spillar, executive vice presideni McAllen, Tex., First National Be asserts: "The outlook economic,, for the valley is the best in yea Even in the boomingest !a centersthough, the recession ca faint shadows. dgc LIBRARY CUIANGES- The General Library now resembles its ne system of open stacks (left). The checking out of books by student exit control centers at the entrance to the General Library right) suffered by the University Library System. Lrary System Changes Result from Budg-et Cuts By JUDITH DONER The recent visible mutations In the processes of ihe University General Library are only the first in a line of changes to be made in the library system,' according to a recent statement by Libbary Di- ector Frederick H. Wagman. The changes are a direct result cf the $50,000 budget cut incurred by the library system, according tii Wagml'an. The budget itself calls for the OE-b on I I r11ese o 11 members of the Ii- biary staff. Four of these will be released from academic positions, Wagma indicted that, in ad- dition. t e number ''f hours that employc c students xmil work, will have to be lessened. Hi said that tis is _ ferable to reducing the student staff numiber'wise. A red actior in the reope of the lhbrary extension service to people in the state xviii also be made. "We Iwill .undoubtedly close one of the branch libraries to help meet costs," Wagman said. "When this will occur will de- pend upon when the general li- brary will be able to Integrate the branch into its set-up," he con- tinued. Wagman said there are no plans to have the branch libraries re- ert to the open stack system, ini- tiated at the University in the Undergraduate Library and re- cently duplicated in the General Library. cent of the book collection has been lost already," he reported. "With the book budget we have received, we can't hope to do much more than replace the stolen books." If, however, the thefts continue He insisted that he open stack at the spring rate, then the system system in which there no books in both libraries will have to be on reserve is still in the "experi- revamped, Wagman said., mental stage, due to the high theft rate recorded at the Unlder-' graduate Library during its first six months in existence. He said that the theit rate is not abnormally high for a Uni- versity, but that there is no rea- son why it should be as high as it is, "Indications are that two per "Entry to stacks is an educa- tional .e x p e r I e n c e," Wagman mavintained. It would be too bad for everyone concerned, if closed stacks had to be reinstated. K antOr Art At Museu OPEN EVENINGS CoIu hiOaRecor s (Harmony Series) each E An exhibit "Sacred Writings and Their Tkansmission" is being pre- sented in the General Library' lobby. It reflects theeime of the sum mer session, ''Religion in Contem porary Society." On display are rare and earl, Bibles of all languages and Hebrew writings. There are also bibIc ipapri an facimIles of the Lindiasfarne Gospe and the'Book of Kells, as well a biblical mamiscripts and books on the Moslem and Far Eastern re- lipgions. The exhibit can be seen unti Aug. 1. D!A l0O: -251 3 NOW SHOWING THE "TOP" COMEDY OF ALL TIMES' "NO TTIME FOR SERGEANTS" STARTS SUNDAY 2 "CHILLERS" pp:5, 14 THE I -, ice P 3 " r a 4 )k r -d Y CLEVELAND UIT Perhaps the high schools which give letters to 1 athletes and trophies to debaters s should also give awards for cx- h at ea was ue rce t the 10 to 15 per cent of the na- tion's students who are academi- cally talented, The report, iwe years in the writing, was released during the annual convention of the National Education Association. It said the schools have a responsibility ,to put academic excellence in a bet- ter light, not only among the stu- ' dents but among teachers, parents and the community at large as well., Says No Real Danger There is no real danger, it said., that singling out gifted students for secial anon wil lea to the creation of an "intellectual elite" in this country.: The American society now tol- erates a number of such elites, the report noted, There is an elite Suggested by .3 PRE SENTEtD Di RING CONVENTION:- ,i I An exhibition "Paintings and & Drawings by Morris Kantor," is pres.ently o d'splay at the Un-.. ier'ity Museum o Art. b Recent Report Tihe cxhibition, whiich will con- ______________________ tinue through the' Summer Ses- sioc includes 12 oil paintinigs and "Further more," it said, "the a, number of drawings, selected by very variety of elites protects the the artist and lent by him,. American-society against he dom- Representing different periods inance of any smnle one." And lat is this special attei_ ip e on arer e tion going to do to bright itte rwigshve beenarngdi Johnny and Susie? Will it make gpproxieci'onoiogical Se- them little stinkers, who feel su- uence from left to right to show perior to those less gifted? the different phases of the ar-? Passow Says No tist's work over a period of 30 Not necessarily, said Hari'y Pas- years. sow, one of the authors of the Born in Mir sk. Russia in 1896, Hundreds Interviewed To.find the mood of the nation, Associated Press reporters talked to hundreds of people-bankers, bartenders, bus drivers, mer- chanth is, stenographers, manufac- turershuwvs, farmers, eon- omists and factory workers-froma Michigan to Texas and California to Maine, The reporters found:1 Farmers sitting on top of the world. Many consumers scared by re- cession talk, unwilling to splurge, and more selective in their buying Bankers and merchants cau- tiously optimistic, but not hopeful of any real upturn until- the end of the year. Auto Dealers Down Auto dealers down in the dumps, Broadly speaking, how good ora how bad business is depends on where you are. Western ranchers, waxing pros-. perous on the cattle boom, refer td the recession as "that thing back East," , But you can't jdlst pick out one, large region and say business here is better or worse than somewhere else. In some Western states devoted] to both farming and mining, you'll find boom prosperity and recession side by side. . Get away from the mines and factories almost anywhere in the Students'Study In Newspaper Jfob Trainin Twenty-six journalism students; from the University are engaged, in a program which combinesa study with on-the-job experience, In a fellowship program involv- ing 11 Michigan newspapers, foura out of state newspapers and one advertising agency, the students are assigned on a rotating basis so that they work in various depart- ments of the cooperating news-, paper or advertising agency, i The program is undertaken on three levels-two or three years post-Master's degree, one year post-Bachelor of Arts degree and two 'or three months summer fel- lowships. "The uniqueness of the program lies in its year-long methodical co- operative supervision by manage- ment and the University," Prof. Wesley H. Maurer, chairman of the Journalism department and supervisor of the fellowship pro- gram said. Concerning the monthlyr eports which the journalists, are required to make to the University, Prof. Maurer explained, "They bring to- gether a variety of training meth- od's and provide the Journalism department with a test of the ef- fectiveness of its teaching meth- ods," "This bekomes a source for plan- ning in modification or strength- ening of current curricula offer- ings," he said. "The post-bachelor of arts pro- gram was strengthened this year by increasing it from seven to 12 months, Prof. Maurer contin- ued, "This came as a result of experiences of both publishers and faculty members," he added. 128-page report,. "You will find little stinkers in any group, whether they're bright or dumb," Prof. Passow said, "Where you find such poor atti- tudies, the teachers and parents are likely to be at fault, not the system which recognizes their superiorcapabilities," Prof. Passow, director of a tab- ented youth project at Teachers College, Columbia University, told a news conference there is a great ned for special progress for gifted cildrenCi, 'HE MARCHES OF JOHN PHILIP SOUSA 4EW SOUNDS BY PETE RUGOLO 'EGGY LEE SINGS WITH BENNY GOODMAN kN AWARD CONCERT BY ART TATUM )INAH SHORE SINGS - COLE PORTER & RICHARD RODGERS 'URE DELIGHT WITH DANNY KAYEl VOODY HERMAN PLAYS HIS OLD HITS ALPH SUTTON PLAYS FATS WALLER HE HITS OF GLEN GRAY BY THE CASA LOMA ORCH. METRONOME ALL-STARS )IXIELAND ALL-STARS 'HE CLASSICS OF BING CROSBY VOODY HERMAN'S FIRST HERD )LE! FLAMENCO recorded in Spain, N OLD VIENNA :IRCUS MUSIC ONGS OF HAWAII rOUJOURS PARIS HA-CHA-CHA recorded in Mexico MAMBO WITH, MORALES OUTH AFRICAN FOLK SONGS ONGS OF OLD MEXICO AUSIC FROM SOUTH PACIFIC- CHEHERAZADE with Rodzinski and Cleveland Orch. !CHAIKOVSKY'S SIXTH SYMPHONY with Rodzinski and The Clevpland Orch. EETHOVEN'S THIRD SYMPHONY with Leinsdorf and The Rochester Orch. CHUBERT'S UNFINISHED SYMPHONY and MOZART'S SYMPHONY NO. 40, Leinsdorf and The Rochester Orch, 'CHAIKOVSKY'S ROMEO AND JULIET and 1812 OVERTURE with Rodzinski and The Cleveland Orch. 'CHAIKOVSKY'S NUTCRACKER SUITE and GRIEG'S PEER GYNT SUITE with Leinsdorf and The Rochester Orch. EBUSSY'S LA MER and ENESCO'S ROUMANIAN RHAPSODY, Rodzinski and Cleveland Orch. ACHMANINOFF'S SECOND PIANO CONCERTO with Gyorgy Sandor TRAUSS WALTZES with Schoenherr and the Vienna State Opera Orch. FFENBACH'S GAITE PARISIENNE and CHOPIN'S LES SYLPHIDES with Kurtz and the Columbia Symphony Orchestra ACH'S BRANDENBURG CONCERTI in three volumes with Fritz Reiner MOZART'S SYMPHONIES No. 35 and 40, Leinsdorf and Rochester Orch. AOUSSORGSKY'S PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION with Rodzinski and the New York Philharmonic ERLIOZ REQUIEM--Rochester Oratorio Society EETHOVEN'S SYMPHONIES No. 5, No. 1, No. 2, No. 4, with Weingartner and the London Philharmonic (two records) 'VALDI'S GLORIA A1 - VM I Kantor received his training in this country, living and working in New York City. His work is iicluded in many of the major art collections of the country, including the Metro- politan Museum of Art, the Mu- seum of Modern Art, the Whit-I ney "usem, the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Worchester Art MuTseum. His painting, "Figures in Land- scape, 1954," is in the collection at the University's Museum., Kantor teaches in the Cooper Art School and the Art Students League of New York, House Namned As Chairman Farm states seeking to attract new indu ties -fd prospects harder to locate and, tougeto sell. Industrial development agen cies reprt that manufacturers who had considered building mw plants in new lcai tiniae shelved their plans for now, Farm Business Good , Merchants in thrivg. harm communities say business is good, but it should be better. They say their customers have been fright- ened by recession trends in othr parts of the country. And farmers know full ell that their prosperity rises or falls h the vagaries of the market place and the weather. The great post- war drought still lives on in ti memries of Southwest cattle farmers, and lately new havoc has been wrought by grasshopper wr* nadoes and floods, On and off the farm, American ,consumers today are cautious. If they're among. the 64 million Americans holding jobs, they prob- ably know somebody or theyW heard about somebody who's be laid off. This knowledge has cre- ated a fear psychology that's hurt. ing retail sales, eyen in areas wher jobs are plentiful and income. high. Consumer Selective What's more, the typical United States consumer of mid-1958 has acquired a, new yardstick of l- ues. He's more selective in what h, buys. Orrin Hankins makes good money as aroofer. 1e ow a nea d suburban ranch house in North Sacramento, comfortably supports a wife and three kids. The other day he arrived home in a newly purchased Chrysler, vintage 1956. Why a used car? "Because," sai Hankins, "the new ones cost too much." At about the same time he bought the car, Hankins invested in two brand new bicycles a sall boat and a 35-horsepower out. board, No drop in consumer spend. ing here. But multiply Hanki s case, a hundred thousand times and you'll realize what worries the auto dealers. Psychologists who study the hi. den urges that make people buy say the high-powered, chrome-be decked American car has lost Its value as a prestige symbol. Businessmen all over tii coun- try say consumers have plenty of cash to spend but they're puttin it in the bank., Study Ceterl May Locate In Ann Arbor A half million dollar research center proposed by the American Society of Heating and Air Con- ditioning Engineers (ASHACE) may be located in Ann Arbor. Joseph Detweiler, Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce boar4 president, tolr the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce in a board meeting that the society is "very interested In locating in Ann w bor and the University is interest- ed in them because. of the re- search facilities. ~They are very definitely Som to move somewhere,". Detweiler explained to the board. "They will contribute to the economy of Ann Arbor" If the society moved here, it would request tax exemption from city, county and state taxes, Det- Weiler added, Thy semsyaZiWbp CO MAPyTU4 4e~t CO-FEATUR group of scentiss, an elie group of athletes .and an elite group of mscans, among others, IAL NO 2-3N36G OTHING EER ITS yEN EANCE.* IDYIS E i BORON[N ?AEUIGI r' Expect Increase RI Central Size MOUNT PLEASANT, P) - Aus- tin J. Buchanan, director of ad- missions at Central Michigan Col- ege, says enrollment is expected to reach 4,400 this year, an in- creas of 32 per cent over last year. DIAL NO 8-6416 Dr. Frederic B. House was ap- pointed by the Ann Arbor Cham- ber of Commerce board as chair-- man of the Chamber's education committee yesterday. Dr. House recently retired as president of the Ann Arbor Board of Education. He had served as school board president for the past two years. 111-1 F. a _ t NOW SHOWING A CASCADE OF CHUCKLES!" "BROTH ERS-iN-LAW" STARTS SUNDAY S K N OWVVS ; ON TREES! i .' I EVERETT'S DRIVE-IN "The Home of the Famous California Delux Burger" lOc French Fries * 15c Milk Shakes 0ANA ANDREWS C USEAPcTR / GENEY~WIrE PA&E'RLDS"UIRE EAIST RIhl' WI!LI HDEWHIJL Pizza Served In Car 2280 WEST STADIUM BLVD. I Near Wrigley's NO 5-5864 Electronic Curb Service '~4 ~ '~J NEXT ATTRACTION "T HE KEY" [ EVERY DAY AND EVENING - GENUINE OLD TOWN CANOESr FrRe 0, r. Ze zvery finesi of the imported stoinless steel patterns - Dunsk, Jensen, Gense. 44" DRIVE A NEW CAR TONIGHT BARGAIN EVENING RAT Keep social engagements in a gleaming new Ford or other fine carl From 6 P.M. until 9 A.M. next day, only C $4,00 plues Meageat 8c per mils This ipouI veal tag rat. also jInE.do I 11