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July 12, 1958 - Image 5

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1958-07-12

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

[D CONDUCTORS' CONFERENCE:

Abato, Ostrander To Perform Today
he tenth annual National Band
ductors' Conference which be-
at the University yesterday
feature Allen Ostrander, bassi
nbonist,, James Abato, clari-
st and the Lockport Township
h School Band. f
onferences will meet in thero
higan Union ballroom today,
re Ostrander and Abato will
ik on and play their respective
ruments. Ostrander will speak
I a.m. and Abato at 1:15 p.m.
strander earned his Bachelor
' ieace degree in instrumental
ic at Itbaca Coilege. His tal-
on the bass trombone have
tied him positions with the Na-">
al Symphony of Washington,
the Pittsburgh Symphony
is presently with the New York
harmonic Symphony Orches-

Vincent Abato, an outstanding
woodwind Pitist, plays the clarinet,
saxophone and bass clarinet.
Abato is a faculty member of
the Julliard School of Music and
is active in radio, television. and
recording.
The Lockport Township High
School Band, conducted by Ernest
0. Caneva,' will present a concert'
on the diagonal at 7:15 p.m. on
Wednesday. In the event of rain,
the concert will be held in Hill
Auditorium.
The program will include selec-
tions from the opera, "Aida," by
Verdi, "Fingals Cave" by Men-
delssohn and selections from Ler-
ner-Loewe's "My Fair Lady."

228

ALLEN OSTRANDER--This famous trombonist will appear as a
guest speaker and performer at the Tenth Annual National Band
Conductors' Conference held July 14 through 18.

JAMES ABATO
. larinetist

'GARDEN OF EDEN':
Iraq Has Resources
Ti C iB Arnhs oeu

DAILY

OFFICIAL

t BULLETIN
The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editor-
ial responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3519 Administration Build-
ing, before 2 p.m., the day preced-
ing publication.
TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1958
VOL. LXVIII, NO. 14-S
Lectures
Linguistics Forum Lecture, Prof.
William E. Welmers, Hartford Seminary.
Foundation, on "Comparative and Ap
plied Linguistics in the Senufo Lan-
guage Group." Tues., July 15, 7:30 p.m.'
Rackham Amphitheatre.
Speech Assembly: Winifred Ward,
Asst. Prof. Emeritus of Speech, North-
western Univ. and Director Emeritus,
Children's Theater of Evanston, Ill. on
"Creative Dramatics: An Art or a Way
of Teaching?" Tues., July 15, 3:00 p.m.,
Rackham Amphitheatre.
La Sociedad Hispanica of the Dept. of
Romance Languages will hold its fourth
summer meeting on Wed., July 16, 7:30
p.m., in the Faculty Lounge ,Rm. 3050,
Friee Bldg. The speaker will be Prof.
Julio del Toro of the Dept. of Ro-
mance Langauges, Corresponding mem-
ber of the Academy of History of Cuba.
His topic will be: "Cuba desde la ocu-
pacion norteamericana hasta la insur-
reccion do Fidel Castro." Open to the
public.
Concerts
Stanley Quartet. The second of the
Summer Series by the Stanley Quar-
tet, Gilbert Ross, first violin, Gustave
Rosseels, second violin, Robert Courte,
viola and Robert Swenson, cello, will
be presented on Tues., July 15, 8:30
p.m. The concert, to be played in the
Rackham Lecture Hall, will include
Beethoven's Quartet in G major, Quar-
tet No 7 by Ross Lee Finney, and De-
bussy's Quartet in G wminor. Open to
the general public without charge.
On Wed., July 16, 7:00 p.m., the 96
member Lockport Township High
School Band of Lockport, Ill, will pre-
sent an outdoor concert on the Diag-
onal near the general library. Presented
as a part of the 10th annual National
Band Conductors Conf., the Lockport
Bandvunder the-tdirection of Ernest
Caneva will feature works by Verdi,
Mendelssohn, Goldman, Gillis, McRae
and Madden. In event of rain, the con-
cert will be held in' Hill Aud.
On Wed., July 16, 8:30 p.m., the U.
of M. Woodwind Quintet will present
a concert in the Rackham Lecture Hall.
Works to be performed include: "Sin-
fonia," Heiden; "Six Dance Carica-
ures," Douglas; "Selected Pieces,"
Mueller; "Three Shanties," Arnold;
'Divertimento No. 8 K. V. 213," Mo-
art; "Quintet Opus 100 No. 4," Reicha;
and "Five Easy Dances," by Agay. The
:oncert will also include a premier per-
formance of a woodwind quintet by
Leslie Bassett, Asst. Prof. of Theory
Composition. Open to the general pub-
ic without charge.
Academic Notices
Students, College of Engineering: The
inal day for dropping courses without
ecord will be Fri., July 18. A course
nay be dropped only with the permis-
ion of the Classifier after conference
with the instructor.
La Sociedad Hispanica of the Dept.
f Romance Languages will have its
veekly Tertulia, for practicing the use
) the Spanish language, today, Tues.,
uly 15, 3:00 p.m. in the Faculty

By The Associated Press
Iraq, the legendary site of the
Garden of Eden, has spawned rich
civilizations in the past and has
the natural wealth to bring forth
a new era for its Arab people.
Oil, the black gold of the Middle
Lounge, Rm. 3050, Frieze Bldg. Refresh-
ments will be served. Stduents and fac-
ulty members interested are invited.
The Langauge Examination for the
M.A. in History will be given July 18,
4-5 p.m., Rm. 429 Mason Hall. Students
who wish to take the examination
should sign the list posted in the office
of the Dept. of History, 3602 Haven Hall.
Dictionaries may be used.
Geometry Seminar: Tues., July 15,
3:00 p.m., 3010 Angell Hall. Prof. G. Y.
Rainich will speak on "Ax" _ ics of
Inversive Geometry."
Doctoral Examination for Robert
Charles Bless, Astronomy; thesis: "Pho-
toelectric Spectrophotometry of A
Stars," Wed., July 16, 22 Observ., 2:00
p.m. Chairman, William Liller.
Doctoral Examination for: John Law-
rence Spencer, ChemistryJ thesis: "The
Synthesis and Reactions of 5-Phenyl-
2-Isoxazoline-3-Carboxylic Acid and
Related Compounds," Tues., July 15,
3003 Chem. Bldg., 9:00 a.m. Chairman,
W. R. Vaughan.
Doctoral Examination for Adoulphus
Paul Thompson, Education; thesis:
"Factors Related to the Academic
Achievement of Students Who Trans-
ferred to the College of Literature;
Science, and the Arts. at'the University
of Michigan from Four-Year Institu-
tions in the State," Wed., July 16, W.
Council Rm., Rackham Bldg., 1:00 p.m.
Chairman, H. C. X och.
Placement&Notices
Personnel Requests:
Michigan Employment Security Com-
mission, Detroit,. Mich., is currently ac-
cepting applications for positions as
Personnel Methods Trainee. Minimum
requirement is college graduation, pref-
erably with major in psychology or re-
lated fields. Transcript of credits must
accompany application.
State of Michigan, Civil Service, an-
nounces examinations for Highway,
Planning Enginers and Building Trades
Itinerant Teacher. Applications must
be postmarked or filed at the State
Civil Service Commission office no later
than July 23, 1958.
Benj. Allen & Co., Inc.; Chicago, Ill.,
are looking for 2 Sales Representatives
to fill a position in Missouri and Iowa,
and a position in Michigan. A repre-
sentative will be at the Bureau of Ap-
pointments later this week, to inter-
view candidates.
For further information contact the
Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin.
Bldg., ext. 3371.
Summer Placement:
National Music Camp is looking for
a man or woman. with Journalism
background for work at Interlbchen.
They are also looking for a radio script
writer with some experience. Full time
job for remainder of summer.
For information on summer work
please contact Ward D. Peterson, 3528.
Admin, Bldg., ext. 3371,
A representative from the Fraser,
Mich., Public Schools will be at the Bu-
reau of Appointments on Wed., July 16
to interview teachers for the 1958-59
schoo' lyear. The fields are Elementary
Education and Vocal Music. For ap-
pointments and any additional infor-
mation contact the Bureau of Appoint-
ments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 4-1511,
Ext. 489,

East, has been paying for the vast
development projects the nation
started under 23-year-old King
Faisal II and his crafty political
strong man, Nuni Said.
Instead of pouring oil revenues
into the royal treasury as King
Saud has done in Saudi Arabia,
the young king has turned as
much as two-thirds of the royalties
back to th enation's development
board in a year.
This money went for roads, slum
clearance in the ancient capital
of Baghdad and ah expanding irri-
gation program aimed at bringing
the nation's parched deserts back
to the fertility, which supported
the Sumerians 3,500 years before
Christ in the famed valley of the
Tigris and Euphrates.
Butit still has a long way to
go. Annual income is about $85 a
person and illiteracy runs 80 per
cent.
World War I freed Iraq from
the Turks of the old Ottoman Em-
pire. The nation went to Britain
under a League of Nations man-
date, and the British presided at
its formal birth as a nation in
1932, when King Faisal's father
took the throne.
Ever since then the British-
owned Iraq Petroleum Co. has
been Britain's lever in the country,
and Iraq has been one of the most
pro-western of Arab nations.
The pro-western policy contin-.
ued into the cold war, when Iraq
was the only Arab state to joint
the Baghdad Pact-the so-called
"northern tier" alliance against
the Soviet Union.
For their allegiance to the West,
Iraq's rulers had to fend off at-
tacks from the other Arab coun-
tries, Who charged Faisal and Nuri
Saii with selling out the 'golden
dream of Arab unity.
Chief among the attackers was
President Nasser of the United
Arab, Republic, who has had his
eye on Iraq's oil resources to help
raise the standard of living for
the miserable peasants crammed
into Egypt's Nile Valley and help
boost his power.
Iraq has no overpopulation prob-
lem like Egypt. Her five million
people (one-fourth of Egypt's) are
spread out over the Eigris-Eu-
phrates Valley in the south and
working in the northern oil fields
and southern Basra fields and re-
finery near the Persian Gulf.
But though the pro-western
policy brought Iraq prosperity un-
paralleled in most of the Middle
East, Iraqi nationalists were em-
bittered because of the rise of
Israel and their own hard strug-
gle for independence from Britain.

~j~j *) Linen furnished
IYa'.e 'm n1319 Hill, Mr. Wentz, NO 2-6422
)E2
Descendant USED CARS
Gets Degree 1953 PONTIAC
Two-tone paint, radio, heater,
It took over 50 hours of class- good tires, very clean interior.
room work and it came 50 years For sale by owner, $395. Call
after receiving .her bachelor's de- NO 2-4736.
gree from the University but on
June 14, Elsa Linda Haller re- 1951 PORSCHE $1,195. Michigan Eurc
ceived her Ph.D. from the Univer- pean Cars, 303 s. Ashley. NO 5-5800
___________)Nl6
sity.
From an old German family, the 1952 PONTIAC, 4-door, blue with
event alsd marked the 100th anni- hydramatic. A-1 condition.
versary of her grandfather's ar- $295.
rival here from Germany. f1953 CHEVROLET, 2-door, green.
Her degree represented some Looks and runs good. $445.
nine years of work. Her thesis, k
"Does the 'Philosophie' of Karl 1955 CHEVROLET, 2-door, green.
Jaspers Justify His Indictment of Excellent condition inside and
the German People in 1945" took out. $895.
just a few months following the
years of preparation. 1956 CHEVROLET, 4-door, 6 cyl-
Miss Haller's interest in Ger- inder, standard transmission.
many led her to pick the topic Choice of two, both low-mile-
for her subject. age and really sharp. $1195.
Miss Haller's interest turned to 1957 CHEVROLET convertible.
late There is a choice of two, one
cause she spent five years in Eu- Tre sand hoicerofltwoBone
rope between the two worldwars red and the other blue. Both
In Oslo when the Germans in- have radio, heater, power-
vaded Norway, she was returned to glide, and the V-8 engine,
Berlin after the invasion. She was while one has power steering
in Berlin during the battle of besides. $2195.
Dunkirk, returning to the United
States from Italy just before the
United States entered into World r
War II. Cor. W. Huron and First Sts.
She completed her studies in Inside Display Lot
May when her thesis was accept- NO 3-3321
ed. Miss Haller also received a )_N_166
masters degree from the Univer- MGA ROADSTER-9,000 miles-origina
sity in 1922. She is a graduate of owner-$1650-black -- white walls -
r hextras. 3947 Lapeer Road (M-24) o
n Aror ig Schoo call Pontiac-FE 5-0811. iN17

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BREADED VEAL STEAK .......,.r.,......1.00
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The Prices Do Not Include Sales Tax

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