DAY, AUGUST 6, 1959 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGN T )AY. AUGUST 6, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE I ..... .. iIHEED' Dawson Backs Outstate Enrollments in Colleges HYDRAULIC OILS: Oil Scientists Make Missile Power CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SPECIAL TEN-DAY LINES ONE-DAY RATE 2 .80 .39 3 .96 .47, 4 112 .54 Figure 5 average wprds to a line. Call Classified between 1:00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS Complete line of HiFi components including kits; complete service on radio, phonographs and HiFi equip- ments. HI Cl7STUDIO 1317 South University 1 block east.at Campus Theatre Phone NO 8-7942 X2 TRANSPORTATION LEAVING Aug. 29 from Muskegon for San Diego, California. Need rider (male or female) to share petro cost. Call NO 2-4875 after 5 P.M. G9 RIDERS to Boston or N.H. Leave August 15. NO 5-7092.t 8 USED CARS 1959 RENAULT $1,595 Mich. European Car Corp. Liberty, at Ashley NO 5-5800 X31 VOLKSWAGENS '56 Green sedan, excellent condition. '55 Black sunroof with radio. Sharp. CH EAP IES BUSINESS SE RVICES REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop. 224 Nickels Arcade. NO 2-4647". - JS 44E'RE on Packard around the corner from State Street. Stop at Ralph's anytime 'till 12 Midnight for the very best in foods. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard' NO 2-3175 4 AST, accurate typing at reasonable rates. NO 3-9104. J22 BARGAIN CORNER BEST SUMMER BUYS: Men's skip-dent short sleeve sport shirts, 97c. Assorted colors, sanforized, ' washable. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W2 HELP WANTED HOUSEWIVES: Would you like to add to your family income? Call NO 2-5274. H28 FOR SALE DISPOSING of part of a large library at private sale. There are books of special interest to student teachers on many subjects. Showings at'617 Pack- ard St. from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. every day except Sunday. Reasonable prices. B11 PORTABLE Smith - Corona' typewriter, excellent condition. $60. NO 2-2521, Room 3322 after 6 PM.B14 3 SIAMESE kittens, male and female, about 4 months old. Also stud service. Phone, NO 2-9020. B12 FOR RENT ROOMS FOR MEN: Quiet, near campus. Linen furnished. Reasonable. NO 3-4747. C45 MALE STUDENTS - two singles and two large double rooms for graduate students in a quiet neighborhood. Linens furnished. NO 2-1465, 923 Olivia. C43 ON CAMPUS: Neat 2 room, furnished, utilities, private bath. NO 8-7234. 041 E. UNIV.-CHURCH-FOREST. Attrac- tive furnished apartments for one to four students, available Sept. $80-$170. NO 3-2800. C38 7 ROOMS Partly furnished, 2nd floor apart- ment. Kitchen facilities. 4th Ave. at Liberty. Call NO 2-0251 after 5 P.M., NO 2-4805 after 6 P.M. C37 ONE ROOM studio for bachelor girl, in lovely campus. area, . furnished, complete community kitchen. NO 2- 6987. C33 DELUXE 3 room furnished apartment includes heat and water. Semi-private bath facilities. $90 a month. NO 2-9020. C27 ROOMS FOR RENT for girls.'%a block from campus. 1218 Washtenaw. NO 8-7942 for arrangements. C12 '41 '49 '53 '53 Chevrolet-...-..... .. .$ 95 Plymouth ..................$ 75 Ford, ......................$150 Chevrolet...................$195 For RESULTS Imported Cars 23 E. Michigan, Ypsilanti N37 WANTED One shrewd discerning person, in- terested in purchasing a good used car. 1951 Chevrolet sedan in perfect, condition that must be sold by August 15. $175 or best offer. You gain. Call NO 5-7356. N35 PERSONAL Em, ' It said Marty. You goofed. Monte F32 MAHALIA JACKSON-Ann Arbor High, Sept. 26, Saturday, 8:30 P.M. Tickets on sale at Bob Marshall's Book Store. F28 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES TIRE SALE Good prices for used tires on trade-ins. Complete Tune-up Serv- ice available. Out-of-state students spend $45 million annually in Michigan. How this educational "tourism" works to the state's immediate and long-range benefit is described by William F. Dawson in the current Michigan Alumnus Quarterly Re-a view. The author bases his estimate ofI out-state student spending inI Michigan on total out-of-state en- rollment of more than 22,000 and annual living expenses of $2,000 for each student. The' proportion of out-of-state students enrolled in Michigan col- leges (14.9 per cent) is well below" the national average, he notes. " Many 'Exports' In addition the total number of Pick Director Of Industrial Relation Staff George Stanley Odiorne, assist- snt director for personnel admin- istration of the General Mills, Inc.," has been named professor of in- dustrial relations and director of the Bureau of Industrial Relations in the University Business Admin- istration School, effective Sept. 15. His appointment, approved by the Regents last month, at his request, was withheld pending notification of company officials. Prof. Odiorne replaces Prof. James H. Taylor, who resigned from the school July 31 to enter private business. Prof. Odiorne received his Bachelor of Science at Rutgers University in 1948, his Master of Business Administration from New York University in 1951 and his Ph.D. from N.Y.U. in 1957. He has published numerous articles on engineering manpower. general management, management development; labor relations and employee relations. He is the co-author'or contribu- tor to the following books: "Selec- tion of Management Personnel," American Management Associa- tion; "Operations Research" Con- ference Handbook, American Man- agement Association; "Essays Today,' Harcourt, Brace & Com- pany, NeW York; "The Uses of Prose," Harcourt, Brace & Com- pany, New York; "Forum-A Book of Essays, Harcourt, Brace & Com-; pany, New York; and "Collective Bargaining," American Manage- ment Association. As director of the Bureau of Industrial Relations he will be responsible for the selection and guidance of research financed by Bureau funds, the conduct of seminars in which research find- ings are reported orally, and the publication and results of re- search. students Michigan "exports" comes within two per cent of balancing the total number it imports from other states. , "With Michigan's higher birth rate and its present low but rapid- ly increasing ratio of young people; who want to go to college, the time may come when a great many more Michiganders will have to go outside for their education than there will be outsiders com- ing in," he notes. "If Michigan' alienates her neighbor states by repeatedly low- ering her (out-of-state student) quotas and raising tuitions, we can hardly expect our neighbors to put out a welcome mat for our students. Denounces Low Quota's "Nothing can be gainde by put- ting a high tariff Wall and placing rigid immigration quotas on out- of-state students," he writes. "As a matter of fact, the ex- pense (to the state) would be much greater because of duplica- 'tion and because all students 'would pay the low, in-state tui- ,tion-r + "Every state, and ultimately every college, would try to be all things to all people," Dawson says. Michigan students would have choice of 63 Michigan institutions, rather than 1,937-the-total for the entire country-"and the state would soon become a cultural tundra," he claims. On a long-term basis,- he con- tinues, student imports can in- crease both the number and qual- ity of trained manpower available to Michigan industry. He concludes that there is "no Chinese wall between Michigan and her neighboring states, and we cannot afford to erect one. "In shutting out the brain power of our neighbors, we would have everything to lose and nothing to gain. Music Societyl Hosts Chorale The Michigan Chorale, com- posed of 100 teen-age singers now on a European good-will concert tour, will present a concert at 3 p.m. Sept. 13 at Hill Aud. The concert will be under the auspices of the University Musical Society in cooperation with the, Michigan Council of Churches, sponsor of the Michigan Chorale. The chorale, conducted by Les- ter McCoy of the University Musi- cal Society, began its overseas itinery June 24. The youths will return to the United States about Sept. 1. Tickets are now available at the offices of the University Musi- cal Society in Burton Tower. Baritone Harsh on U.S. Attitude Towards Music UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. p)- Dr. Merrell R. Fenske is one of science's muscle men. He supplies muscles for missiles shooting into space . . . muscles to guide mammoth radar antennas standing guard in the Arctic . . to work airplane landing gears .. move battleships gun turrets and missile platforms quickly and unerringly on their targets. And tomorrow, muscles to work vital mechanisms aboard rocket ships carrying humans to the Moon or Mars through the vac- uum of space. These muscles come from oils, hydraulic oils, in one of the vital but lesser-known challenges for' science. These are no ordinary oils. The same oil muscle may have to work at temperatures ranging from 65 below to 600 degrees above zero, not foam or bubble at high alti- tude, be pumpable, not too thin or too thick, and also be a good lubricant. Most everyone has heard of electronic devices serving as the brain and nervous system for man's marvelous, complex ma- chines. These give commands, tell when a motor should turn on, how long or fast it should work- like a nerve signal to a muscle. By KATHLEEN MOORE A graduate of the University currently visiting the campus has some high praise for the music school but little for the American attitude toward opera. The University has the "best music school in the country and a music staff that compares with any in the world," Thomas Tip- ton, baritone with the Manheim Theatre in Germany, said. In the next breath, he claimed there is "so little respect for mu- sic in this country it's a shame," adding that he is "very much ashamed that we (the Univer- sity) don't have a new music building." Fulbright Scholar Tipton ireceived a masters de- gree in music and voice here in 1956, then went to Germany to study on a Fulbright scholarship. His career at the University, which began after he had ap- peared professionally with the New York City Opera Company for some time, was precipitated by the "thought of going on to teach at a University some time in the future." His choice of schools stemmed from high recommendation he heard of Prof. Chase Baromeo, voice teacher here. Since con- cluding his study with Prof. Baro- meo, Tipton commented, he hasn't had a voice lesson --- "I haven't found anybody else good enough to entrust my voice to." Visiting Former Teacher. One of the reasons for his cur- rent stay is to visit with his form- er teacher, another to sing an en- gagement with the Detroit Sym- phony Orchestra at 8 p.m. today at the State Fair Grounds. Tipton is taking the month's vacation allotted to German op- era singers who work 11 months of the year on a salaried basis. There is no comparison between the reception and attention opera receives in this country and Ger- ,1 But it is hydraulic pumps a oils which do the work. Constructs Oils Finding or constructing such of for hydraulic pumps and speci lubricants has for 30 years bee the task of Dr. Fenske, direct of the Petroleum Refining Labor tory at the Pennslyvania Sta University, and a team of assoc ates. "Sometimes we have a pretty go( prospect right on the shelf," explains. "We have always bei analyzing old and new types oil refining and chemical pr cesses, learning what produc they produce. This built up a fur of basic knowledge. "And we're sort of like squl rels here--we hate 'to throw an; thing out. "So when the Air Force needs an oil that could withstand yei high temperatures, we thougt 'gee, we have one that mightc it.' We cleaned it up, modifi it, added special i gredients, and it is a fine hih temperature lubricant." Aid British In a blazing battle off Mala: early in World War II, the Briti fleet lost the proud Prince Wales, the Repulse and other wa ships to Japanese airplanes. The British sailors could a the attacking planes. But thi guns couldn't swing about quick and accurately enough' to I them. Dr. Fenske's team found a h draulic oil which could do the jc and also could stand up under e posure to -salt water and a contamination. The laboratory developed mo of the hydraulic fluids and tu bine engine lubricants in toda: aircraft, including the B-52 ax F-100 F Super Sabre, and missil such as Atlas, Snark, Thor, Tita Jupiter and Polaris. Special hydraulic oils swing t giant radars of the DEW (dista; early warning) line watching I enemy bombers in the Arctic. The Job Ahead Special oils are being design for anti-missile missiles, ready launch at an instant's notice. Th must not deteriorate under loi periods of storage, Dr. Fenske plains, for there would never time to change oil once a nuclea missile war broke out. Hydraulic mechanisms wilp1 vide some of man's controls in.r future space ships. They mu not fail .to work under weightles ness or zero gravity,, under heat cold, or radiation-;exposure. ( scientists are devising them no, Phone NO 2-47& for Michigan Dail Classified Ads 'I THOMAS TIPTON baritone many, he emphasized. Germany, Tipton feels, is "the only coun- try that really appreciates and understands opera." Federal Support Opera is supported by the Ger- man government and.a cultural minister promotes music, he ex- plained, but Washington, D. C. doesn't even have an opera house, let alone a position on the cab- inet dealing with music. Continuing his contrast, he said Germany, Switzerland and Aus- tria contain about 70 opera houses with more being built whereas in America there is one opera house open for only 20 weeks out of the year. During the last year Tipton has appeared in major roles in 100 performances - "you'd never get the opportunity in this country to sing that many." No doubt as to his preference was left when he said, "I hope I can stay in .Europe for the next 50 years." GOLDEN'S SERVICE STATION 601 Packard NO 8-9429 53 Read and Use Daily Classifieds ONE BLOCK from campus, modern apts. 514 So. Forest. Call Mr. Pearl, NO ft2-1443. Cl C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service Is. our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessor- ies. Warranted & guarantee4. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service-mechanic on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get it!" 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 82 WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 S1 U -DAILY.OFFICIAL BULLETIN y DNSWM? Read Daily Classifieds } for Fall's Career woman a . 9.. " U - t: i:. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michiga Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 32-S Lectures , Forum Lecture, Linguistics Institute, Thurs., Aug. 6, 7 :0 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. "Linguistic Split in Western Romance," Frederick B. Agard, Assoc. Prof. of Linguistics, Cornell Univ. Concerts Doctoral Recital: Charles Fisher, pi- anist, Thurs., Aug. 6, 8:30 p.m., Rack- ham Assembly Hall. Student Recital: Sister Mary Alma Christa Williams, pianist, Aud. A, An- gell Hall, instead of Rackham Assembly Hall, as previously announced. Thurs., Aug. 6, 4:15 p.m. o last-minute look at early transition cottons and wools Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Donald Thomas Shanower, Speech; thesis: "A Comparative and Descriptive Study of Three Opera Houses in Southern Mich- igan, 1880-1900," Sat., Aug. 8, 2020 Frieze Bldg., 1:00 p.m. Chairman, W. P. Halstead. Doctoral Examination for James The- odore Tedeschi, Jr., Psychology; thesis: "Infantile Stimulation in Rats and the Genesis of the Disposition to Emotion- ality," Fri., Aug. 7, 7611 Haven Hall, 3:00 p.m. Chairman, J. W. Atkinson.: Doctoral Examination for Fredei'iek Kent Boutwell, Mechancal Engineer- ing; thesis: "The Combustion of Heavy Fuel Oils in Atmospheres of Reduced Oxygen Content and Elevated Temper- atures." Thurs., Aug. 6, 247A W. Engrg. Bldg., 1:00 p.m. Chairman, F. L. Schwartz. Doctoral Examination for Sheila Claire Feld, Psychology; thesis: "Stu- dies in the Origins of Achievement Strivings," Fri., Aug. 7, 6625 Haven Hall, 10:00 a.m. Chairman, J. W. At- kinson. Placement Notices There will be a representative at the Bureau of Appointments from Little Rock University (Little Rock, Arkan- sas) Thurs., Aug. 6 to interview for the following positions: Head of Psychology (Ph.D. pre- ferred); Dean of Students (part-time Asst. Prof. of Psychology). For appointments contact the Bu- reau of Appointments, 3528 Adminis- tration Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489, Personnel Requests: Home for Problem Girls in the Ann Arbor area needs Houseparents. Will employ a couple, but only want the woman for full time work. Husband may be student, teacher, etc. Woman will be housemother to about eight girls, age 11-15. Must be 25 and ma- ture. Scott Paper Co.,Chester, Pa. Grad- uates for careers in sales mgt. Age: under 28; willingness to relocate during career; above average grades; service requirements completed; specific de- gree or experience not required. Y.W.C.A. has vacancies throughout the country for the following: Adult Program Director; Executive Director; Health, Physical Education and Recre- ation Director; Group Worker; Associ- ate Executive Director; Executive Di- rector; Area Program Director; For lo- cations of these and requirements, contact the Bureau. McDonald Trailer Sales, Inc., Sara- sota, Fla. College student or graduate for Designer, who can do both three dimensional and schematic drawing. A husband and wife combination would be an ideal arrangement to do design- ing, color scheming and decorating. Michigan Civil Service announces exams for: Hospital Resident Training Director VA and Architect. Closing date for acceptance of applications is August 26. U.S. Civil. Service Commission. The current civil service listing of job va- cancies in the Illinois, Michigan and wisconsin area is now on file at the Bureau. The Commission also an- nounces the examination for Account- ing and Auditing Clerk. For further information concerning any of the above positions, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin., Ext. 3371. lef/ y'l r Y/ P " " i r 51 4 r ,: O I -- cavflo main floorn dresses - SIZES -519 from 17.98S whether you will spend this Fall teaching, in an office or on a campus ....our collection of muted wool plaids, deep rich colors, and subtle weaves are the right answer to take you anywhere. I' F 4.-. i NOW 'I tl . 4 , ifl y p, k6 fN' pftt lu a , I DIAL NO 8-6416 S Y 4: D 7r... t i2 is When a baby comes into his life... before the wedding,.. ENDING TONIGHT DIAL NO 2-3136 KIKY DOU&AS ATNY OUINN What would we ever do without the ensemble, with spencer jacket covering a bare-topped dress - in nubby drip dry cotton. II I ~sta~ng i :3 '" A 11 C