n unters indow Shoppers Find i ii*IT'S WORTH IT-Bargain Days in Ann Arbor attracteda wide variety of bargain hunters, including the younger set whose "bargains" consisted of out-rate prices for the amusement-park rides settled >. r in State and Main Streets for the two-day period. The youngsters don't really seem to mind the wait for tickets, for at long last, they can take an exciting whirl on a hot summer day. For the "slightly older" set; merchants provided the attraction of a sports car display on State Street. tisan Polities Displayed FOLLOW PAVEMENT 'TRAILS': Conference Members Americans Travel Historic HighwasP (Continued from Page 1) ____ -Daily--Aian wince roup Elect 'ofessor proposed a civil rights commission to look into private as well as public housing. Traces to 'Reactionaries' Miss Becker denied that the Williams' administration has failed, and charged that the cur- rent tax woes can be traced to the "barrier of the reactionary GOP legislature." However, Mrs. Edwards assailed the administration, saying it has issued "words, words, words," while action has been "very, very slight." She claimed- Gov. Williams is snot "a full-time governor," but. one who is "out campaigning and going around the country.," Questions Program If the governor has a "wonder- ful" program, she asked, "why, hasn't he ever brought it before the public?, Turning to the concept. of partisan politics, Mrs. Edwards- stressed "we t(Republicans and Democrats) must ,be united. in some of our goals or the state would not continue to exist. "We don'$ want to see the state wiped off the map or forgotten," she said. By RAY SHAW Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer This summer thousands; of American vacationers will drive along modern highways which, perhaps'unknown to them, were in years past highways to history: The Chisholm Trail .. . Boston Post Road .. . The Santa Fe Trail . Zane's Trace ... "El Camino Real" The Oregon Trail. . The Mohawk Trail. In meny cases, highways follow these trails that first opened up the midlands and later the West to the frontiersmen; that helped make the Southwest "cattle coun- try"; that carried Indians, pioneers and gold seekers. Here is a description of some of the roads and trails, why they were important in the past, and the highways that now follow them. BOSTON POST ROAD-First an Indian trail, it later became the .King's, Highway- and the principal thoroughfare between Boston and New Haven, Conn. It took the name of Boston Post Road in the 1670's. Gradually the road ex- tended south, to New York, then to Philadelphia, Williamsburg, Charleston and eventually into Florida. The road's importance grew after Benjamin Franklin became deputy postmaster general in 1737, and mail service was extended to the seaboard. It was improved during the Revolutionary War to handle the mail stages and movement of colonial and British troops. During the 1780's, the road be- came the main artery of commerce between Massachusetts and Vir- ginia. United States Highways 17 and 1 follow the Boston Post Road's route part of the distance.- ZANE'S TRACE--' Most of the pioneers who first settled in Ken- tucky, Indiana and Illinois traveled Zane's Trace, which Congress au- thorized Ebenezer Zane to build in 1796 from Wheeling, W. Va., to what is now Maysville, Ky. Part of the Trace now is 'along United States Highway 40. It was the route followed by Washington's soldiers who chose to take free land offered them in the midlands. EL CAMINO REAL-"The Royal Highway," on the West Coast, is one of the nation's oldest road- ways, dating back to 1769. Spanish explorer.Portala is believed by his- torians to have been the first per- son to use it. Today, it is United States Highway 101. With Portala was a Jesuit priest, T. Foreign students attending the summer session each year usually number about one-half those en- rolled for the previous spring ! semester. India and Canada have the larg- est number of students, 83 each, among the 66 nations represented on campus this summer. Other na- tions' totals include Venezuela with 60, Japan with 49, Turkey with 43,' the Philippines with 39, Iran and China with 31 each, Indonesia with 30 and Columbia with 29. Y a , (Continued from Page 2) Placement Notices Personnel Requests: Farm Bureau Insurance Co., Lansing, Mch., current" opening for:, Supervisor of the Policy Values Dept. Must .have some combination of the following: a) training, b) experience, and/or c) strong interest in insurance. County of Los Angeles Rancho_ Los Amigos Hospital, Downey, Calif., two Clinical Psychologists. Y.W.C.A. Adult Program Director - Trenton, N. J.; Executive Director - Greensbury, Pa.; Health, Physical Edu- cation and Recreation Director-Cleve- land, Ohio: Group Worker - Dayton, Ohio; Assoc. Executive Director - Seattle, Wash.; Palo Alto, Calif. - Ex- ecutive Director; Area Program Direc- tor. -- Miami, Fla.; and.Executive Di- rector - Tulsa, Oklahoma. The following companies need engi- neers: Western Electric Co., Plymouth, Mich,. B.S.M.E. or B.S.E.E. Recent graduates. General Electric Co., Waterford, N.Y.: Process Engr. M.S., B.S., or Ph.D. in' Chemn. Engrg. The Milwaukee Road, Milwaukee, Wis.; Graduates of Chemistry, Physics and Metallurgy. DIAL NO 2-3136 IN DYAD$COPE CC I BARGAIN DAYS Photo Specials ZiESS CONTINA CAMERA & case originally49:00 . .NOW 24.95 POLAROID LAND CAMERA NO 95B originally 94.50 . . . NOW 69.95 PILOT 7x35 BINOCULARS with case I R A 11 L"i"YA / ih l M1" "M/w Iti IAA 0% A CA I V;...:. % :. re: IIE SUeciai lnurcnase -L-Z4 5U U